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The Bourbon News: August 10, 1906.
The Bourbon News: August 10, 1906. The Bourbon News. 400dpi TIFF G4 page images Champ & Bro., Paris, Kentucky : 1906 bn1906081001 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. The Bourbon News: August 10, 1906. The Bourbon News. Champ & Bro., Paris, Kentucky : 1906 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognition (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has been done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Libraries Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. THE BOURBON NEWS J J J rJ r r Jf Itti 0 f S Z f1 ot7 y a r- a azyaai I PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY FRIDAY IN VOLUME XXVI PARTS KENTUCKY PKIDAY AUGUST 10 1906 NTJMBEE 60 n c AN THE YEAR a i i V d c 1 flie Nerve ot This Man Hargis Withdraw from the prosecutions of the andCallahan stump the Istrict for Hopkins and he can have the next nomination for Congress two years from now was tie nature of the proposition made to Attorney A Floyd Byrd Monday at Peattyville by Judge J J C Bach claiming to represent Alex Hargis suys a telegram from that place In answer to the proposition Attor ney Byrd said he was in the prosecution of the men charged with the of James B James Cockrill and Dr B D Cox through a sense of duty and that his character and honor was not for sale at any price Judge Bach was given to understand by Attorney Byrd that he did not want the Concessional nomination or any other nomination if he had to get it through Jim Hargis and Ed Callahan He said he did not want any office that Hargisisin or was in any way secured through the efforts of the Breathitt county feudists The proposition to have been made by the Hargises to Byrd one of their legal representatives creat ed a sensation the people of Lee county all of whom are for Byrd and ceclare that he is the strongest man in the Tenth Congressional district to day Leecounty was solid for Byrd in the recent convention at Pikeville and both Democrats and Republicans here say it will be an easy matter for him to con trol the affairs if he so chooses in the future When asked about the proposi tion Attorney Byrd simply laughed at the absurdity of it He said it was true that such a proposition had been niade to him and that he declined to sacrifice his honor to shield Hargis and Callahan He said he was in the prosecution to a finish let the finish what it may DVJAV Ferguson Dead Dr J W Ferguson aged 49 years a wellknown physician of the Shawhan neighborhood died yesteday morning of Funeal services will be held this moningat Mt Carmel church con ducted b Rev J L Clark and Rev W Benton Burial at Battle Grove Cemetery at Cynthiana Revoked MayorGpmbs of Lexington has re voked the licenses of W C Foley and D M barley two Lexington saloon men for violation of the Sunday law HomeKilled Mdat We have some of the finest hoire killed slaughtered in Paris Will take pleasure in filling order with something nice Give us a trial 27tf LAUGHLIN BROS Luckiest Man in Arkansas V Im the luckiest man in Arkansas writes H L Stanley of Bruno the of my wifes health after five years of continuous coughing and bleeding from the lungs and I owe my good fortune to the worlds medicine Kings New Discovery for consumption which know from will cure if taken in time My wife improved with first bottle and twelve bottles completed1 the cure Cures the worst soughs andrcolds or mpney refunded At Oberdorfers SOc and LO TriaV bottle free For Rent house with four and all modern Conveniences on Fifteenth street For fucther information call on r address 73t MR ALMA AD AIR v Religious communion services will beheld at Presbyterian Church Sun iay morning Preparatory services Saturday morning Rev peo SW Clarke of the Bap tist Church is engaged in a meeting at the Silas Baptist Church Rev Braden Preaching night only this week and at II am Mr e neqfe to fill his in Sunday morning as Mar m smackedof ambng j T since restoration Dr Ij drug store t i et- A rooms eSe o hasH a ned week and Clarke however r s f f L assassination s alleged though J cancer Licenses meat ever Your greatest ex erie ce Consumption D hp 1 y iastor night uliit usual r- f t j Bourbon County Sunday School Convention t The BoUrbon County Sunday School Convention at Little Church Tuesday The was largely attended being seats enough in the church for the crowd The rain which commenced before the convention convened kept many from distance away Had it not been for this it would have been the largest attended convention ever held in the noise of the rain on the roof and the crowded of the church made it impossible for everybody to hear and apppreciate what was being said but upon a whole the convention was quite instructive Some of the workers came away en thused with the larger and better School Work which was discussed The ladies of the church credit for the in which they managed things under the conditions All of the dinner was moved into the church yard and was to have been served there but after the rain came up an old warehouse had to be cleared up cleaned and tables put r up and everything moved there through hard rain but the ladies were equal to the occasion feeding everybody without confusion a a king The more that you would eat the more they would insist on you eating The following officers were elected for the ensuing year L McChesney of Paris Vice President Rev H R Laird of M llersburg Secretary and Treasurer Mr Joe Jaccby of Hutchison Assistant Secretary and Treasurer Mr Homer Shy of Paris District Secretary for Miilersbur Current V District Secretary for Little Rock Eddie Burris District Secretary for Ruddles Mills Thos Current District Secretarry for Clintpnville S L Weathers District Secretary for Paris Homer shy k At 3 p m theconveriti9n adjourned to meet again at the Clintonville Christian church next August v Sosby Acquitted Ev Thomasons court at Millerbsurg John Sosby acquit ted on the charge of shooting James Johnson on the ground of selfdefense The difficulty occurred some W eks ago at a prayer meeting at the i Tarr school house near Millersburg Warrants were issued for James Johnson and Ora Howard charging them with carrying concealed They were arrested and gave bond The Paris Business i Prof Lippard wishes all interested in entering the Business College 1st of Sept to send their names to the News office and see him next week He has just placed six more Kentucky gradu ates into positions this week He wants Iff f 102t China Shower Social The Womens Society will hale a china shower and a social combined in the of the Christian church Thursday evening1 Arugust16 from 7 3J to 10 oclock A cordial invita tion is extended to all Teachersf Institute The Bourbon County Teachers Insti tute will be held in this city next Week Conducted by Pfof R M Shipp of Winchester Friday has been selected as Trustee Day and every B the county is tobe present K i Examination for Scholarship in Normal School for scholarship in Sate Normal School at Leixntgon will be held in Superintendent the fourth Saturday in August Farm Sold R L Wilson of Millersburg sold hisffarm containing abuot 100 aces to Berry Jr yesterday I convened Rock IChristi n convention ther not a- gO counhtyThe condition Sunday way to I PresidentF M H I sometIme R I was t I I Will Rankin I weapons f au r pa lors f ip I j examination s o iCon Y J near dord tjt J 1 dinneriit for In Squire two College students trustee invite The IcGhesney F 0teracre t The Fordham Bar0 The new Fordham Bar Messrs J H Current Co has been transformed into a thing ot beauty cleaned with hand some new furniture that makes the nlace of the most inviting bars in iiie city nothing tut the best wines champaigns whiskies with the celebrated Jung Beer in keg and bottle old VanHook Chicken Cock Sam Clay Bond Lillard and Old Forrester They carry the finest line o cigars in the city Visit the new Fordham Bar and be delighted with a cool refreshing drink and courteous treatment 102t Negro Identified John Quisenberry the negro who was lodged in jan at Madisonville charged with assaulting Miss Myrtle Fugate was yesterday identified as her assailant by the youngwoman She j walked into the jail and selected him from among the other nergo prisoners and says she is certain he is the right oneThe friends of the girl are very much excited over the matter and it is fear j ed that should an attempt at violence be made they hard to control The jail is being heavily guarded It is rather remarkable that when ever New York feels that she ought to ieoim there is a shakeup in the police force OF REAL ESTATE BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT Thomas Hawkins c Plaintiffs of Sale Lizzie Johnson c Defendants By virtue of a judgment and order cf sale made and entered in the above styled cause at the June term 1906 I will sell at public auction to tbq highest i b drier on j Saturday August 25 1906 on the public square in Paris Bourbon County Kentucky at about the hour of 11 oclock a m the following describ ed real estatep 1 A lpt df land situated In Bourbon the Paris and turnpike it being a part of Sid Clay farm and about seven miles from the tcwn of Pars and bounded as follows Beginning at a corner to Simon i Asnursts line then N 75J W 2484 of Simon Frazier in the middle of v then b 78 E 2816 poles to the be ginning containing about one acre Said sale will be made upon a credit of six and twelve months for equal parts of the purchase money for which the purchaser will be required to exe cute bonds with good surety payable to the undersigned Master and bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from date of sale until paid said bonds to have the force and effect of judgments Evans being one undivided onesix tjenth each qf said land and the in Tand shall not be pai by the purchaser j come of age or until the guardians of said infants execute bonds as required by the 493rd Section of the Civil Code of practice Witness my hand this 9th day of August 1906 RUSSELL MANN M C B C C C A McMillan Attorney 101724 Lfexingf on Ku TO OLD POINT COMfORT and Return Via Chesapeake Ohio Ry AUGUST 11 15 days limit Good for stop overs in the mountains I proPrietors paperedand one d spc i3e I TUEs lay t be MASTERS SALE VsNotice C KentUcky n Cl ntonviHe I runningNI turnpikethenpik I f defendants HattieMoore I landbearingI Iwr Kll I 1200 9j I 1 II L I mE They will i Commissioner undivided SATURDAY I = SALE OF Gents Furnish ings and Shoes v EVERYTHING L I AT COSTFor Gash to Dissolve Partnership Sale will commence Tuesday Augiist 7thy and will continue until the entire stock is sold changed during thi Dissolit Sale v 5 PARKER JAMES H H H HH f FRAHK C0 li SUMMER GOODS AT CriPQ TTT We Are Offeting Some Very Special Prices on K Ladies and Childiren s Oxfords 1 Wash and Silk Suits v SMrt Waists and Separate Skirtsr v Lawns and White Goods New Styles in Skirts Just Received cv j I L I J Cloth ng 5 c c t i i J 1 j v Nothing I rLIon I I 1 II I h L t s 1 r q i F t 4 i n ti1 ifIe f tPrieelS o r-t j vI I i 4 l tri I t t I t t r c r f riI Jit 1iY I t i i f ti1 t rlII J FRANK to c iti t i t t titat tta i ia ti ai t t 1 4 f f4 ii t t II J n V v 6 1iJ Qc 1 t b t J I i I DISSOLUTION I i I IIk I I y IT I 1 i 9 tr rt rSR rrrl4rkrz t i a 1 H S 1t a t y i 4 riR r 1 f I11 1 = ++ ++ + ++ +++++++++ + + + + + = + = = + ++ + DR LOUIS H Tuesday Aug 7th Mrs Smith Clarks LOW RATE Excursions 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month to San Antonio Hous ton Galveston Fort Worth Dallas El Paso and other Texas points Missouri Kansas Nebraska Arkan sas Oklahoma and Indian Territory Denver Colorado Springs Pueblo also to in Mexico For further particulars consult your local Ticket Agent or S T SEELY T P A 513 Traction jBldg Cincinnati O X P McOARTY Gen Pass Agent FOR SALE One sevenyearold mare sound and gentle Suitale for buggy or delivery 0 W MILLER 1465 South Main street Paris Ky BOGAERT J E KNOCKE VICTOR BOGAERT Manuracturing Jeweler and Importer No 135 W Main Street Lexington Kentucky Importing House Brussels Belgium yii fjhe Jfcitfhest Perfection c V of Corset individuality W ffi We have styles to suit K each and every type of ijjjy figure Boned through fy out with Spirella the AI Aj W breakable A boning Inspection W W solicited Cowry Staple and Fancy Groceries Garden Seeds and Flower Seeds Homemade Cakes and Candies The best of everything to be had in a grocery fiolladay Suit Case Lot On North Middletown pike between W C Massies and Trundells gate leather suit case on end was written in inkDan McFarlan lock was miss ing Every article can be described Finder will please leave at Bourboon News office and receive liberal reward A D MFARLAN gdl 1f th LAND NAN at fi q Tir l J VIA W tilljuly31 I I I IfA 11 It r I loSe t It It It b I I i I It I l i It o nly guaranteed u n ta y Boward tItp L I I 1 I Bruce I I t 4 a- r 4 I5meseekers U L 9 3333 piie11i ii ip11 Corsets sand 1 0- Y r e N 4 e + + + ++ + + = Kentucky Fair Dates The fDlb7mj are the dates fixed fo holding the Kentueky Fairs for 1906 as far as reported Officers of fairs are requested to report to us any omissions or correction of dates Richmond July days Lancaster July 18 Hustonville July days Winchester July days Madisonville July days Danville August days Harrodsburg August days Fern Creek August days Vanceburg August days Shepardsville August 214 days Lawrenceburg August 21 4 days Springfield August days Brodhead August Gutherie August days Nicholasville August 23 3 days Shelbyville August days U Florence August 29 4 days Ewing August days Elizabethtown September days Paris September days Bardstown September days Monticello September days Glasgow September days Henderson September days Falmouth September days Pembroke September days Owensboro October days Mayfield Ky October days County Court Days JT First Monday Paris Richmond Maysville Second Monday Lexington Carlisle Owingsville Stanford Third Monday Georgetown Mt Sterling Danville Nicholasville Fourth Flemingspurg Verasilles ELITE BARBER SHOP GURU GWHIFORD Proprietor Cold and Hot Baths FIVE CHAIRS NO WAITS Only Firstclass Barbers Employed McCarthy Insurance Agents it Representing ETNA 4 NORTH BRITISH CONTINENTAL GLENS FALLS AMERICAN HAMBURG BREMEN GEORGIA HOME Special Lines H Guarantee and Indemnity Bond ji- s Plate Glass and Accident IE OFFICE AT Deposit Bank Giihor Phone Vfo 25 sunin ii mi1 1 1 in u1 1 nil 1 1 mil NO LAW SUIT BUT MENS SUITS GIVEN AWAY AT TWIN BROS for Cash at the following low prices 5 Suits 398 10 Suits 495 Mens wants 69c Boys Summer Suits 42c Everything sold regard of former prices Bring your money and get bar gains 113 253 253 315 13 74 144 154 154 153days 233 284 303 43 45 54 114 124 255 264 273 25 34 I MondayCynthiana Winchester I EUIJ n 1111111 n IIlIUJ lUlU It SUI J I II un i Board iI I i ROYAL 5 i S i I i i urn lUll to be I 3 days p h Fal- mouth iII E W ssssi s tl e i = = = = = = THE BOURBON NEWS NO BROADWAY SWIFT CHAMP EDITOR AND OWNER Display advertisements 100 per inch for first time 50 cents per each subsequent insertion reading notices 10 cents line each issue black 20 cents per line each issue cards of galls on candidates and similar matter 10 cents per line Special rates for big advertisements PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY ONE YEAR 200 SIX MONTHS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Entered at Paris Kentucky Postoffice as Secondclass Mail v Matter Established in 24 Years of Continuous Publication The Political Checker Board v The voters are watching with much interests the game that is being played on the political checker board and are expecting important moves to be made in next few days or maybe weeks It is said that it is more than probable two or more candidates for minor offices will withdraw It seems to all de pend on the success Governor Beckham and Percy Haley have in their efforts to get Congressman Ollie James to tie up with them and run for Governor when he arrives from abroad which will be sometime in the next two weeks We predict that Congressman James is a bit too wise to be led astray by this gang of political tricksters if not we are bady fooled in him He may run for Governor but not as a BeckhamHaley candidate to be the polls The Hon Ollie is no sucker and knows a thing or two himself when it comes to this political game or most any other kind of a game as far as that is Many politicians believe that Beckhams only hope is to James to become a candidate for Governor They say that the tide is sweeping to IcCreary almost irresistibly and that unless James does run Beckham will either withdraw from the race have the primary called off V Take the advice of one who wishes you well withdraw Percy cant land yon and just think of the ignominious defeat that is in waiting for the boy Governor Cant you see the hand writing on the wall everybody else can with probably the exception of your dearly beloved Percy AS this advice is all gratis we will add that if you do or do not withdraw from the Senatorial race cut loose from Percy Haley and the people will have more respect for you He is too much weight for a colt like you to carry You are track sore now your jockey has given you too much work so take this good advice and go to the stable If you dont that old war horse James B McCreary will seiid you there in with the brand of also ran stamped so deep that the will hide it from the public gaze We Are From Missouri The intimation that the little falling between Beckham and Hager is only a sham seems to be growing on the people It can easily be see where a fake falling out between these two machine gentlemen to hoodwink the people could work for the good of each machine candidate Beckliam running for the Senate will be allowed to name his election officers Hager candidate for Governor will be allowed his pro rata All his under the guise that the enemies when in re ality they mere only trying to get a majority of machine election officers in every voting booth in the State It looks as if the machine men have divided for a purpose Is it not reasonable to believe this falling out business be tween Beckham Hager and Haley is only a scheme to have complete control of the primary election officers These three men are known to be the main cogs in this damnable corrupt machine that would stoop to anything to promote their selfish ends These men have demonstrated to the citizens of Bourbon county that they can no more be trusted when it comes to a promise than you could keep a snow ball from melting in h 1 If they turned the people down in Bourbon why wouldnt they turn the people of the State at large When it comes to this falling out business we are from Missouri The Facts Show It Senator LaFollette says that the United States Senate at its late session was more representative of the people than the of Representatives It must be admitted that the facts show and the reason is plain that the House chiefly the views and wishes of the Speaker and his clique who are ex treme standpatters to the railroads and trust and forced the House to to make the people pay for beef inspection while the Senate voted that the cost of inspec lion should Jbe paid by the Beef Trust To reelect a rEebubli lican Congress to riujj rule v v V PHONES j24 Y I per s kI 1 18 J I some slaughteredat or never i out pro rata of as keeping r J c 1- J House represents vote t 1 Q s BOTH ine in the concernS induce November t two were friend corporations means continue this 1 y + = Sun Zone WILL CURE Fistula Stratches Barbed Wife Guts and Many other troubles i yourrf JfcxHsri PRICE ioo FORiSALE BY GLflRKE 60 DRUGGISTS fli Cancers Cured Without Knife or Pail i th I r r o orse 1u i 1- w = = Guarantee a Cure In Every Case I Undertake REFERENCES Any Citizen of Paris Addressme at Paris Ky W R SMITHLockBox631 V WATERMELONS CANTELOPES PEACHES Everything in the fresh vegetabe line for Saturday Market Phone your order WM SAUER THE UPTODATE DOWN TOWN 6ROCE5 Interurban Lines PARIS every hour from 6 a m to 7 p m and at 9 and 11 p m Leave Paris every hour from 7 a m to 8 p m and at 10 and 12 p m GEORGETOWN Lexington every hour from 6 a m uto 7 p m and at 9 and 11 p m Leave Georgetown every hour hour from 6 a m to 8 p m and at 10 p m VERSAILLES DIVISION Leave Lexington from Center every hour from 6 a m to 6 p m and at 8 and m Leave Versailles every hour from a m to 7 p m and at 9 and 11 p m Good Investment Five houses three vacant lots and fifteen acres of will be soldTat Reynolds sale Wecinesclay Aug 1st 230 p m V DIVISIONLeave 1Lexing- ton DIVISIONLeave lOp eland j t 1 S r s ICE TEA We have II grades of Tea ranging in price from 40 cts tof2j per pound We especially recommend Hero and Boka for ICE TEA Both Phones 423 Dangers of Defective Plumbing Defective plumbing permits the of sewer gas bearing germs or succumbs Sewer is not necessarily generated in the sewer but is frequently created in the system within the home enters the ments through defective fix tunes in doubt consult us regarding the and re defective fixtures with STANDARD Porcelain En ameled Ware acknowledged as the best equip went TELEPHONE 180 I I 1 I 1- i I y I Sipfil I U whichthe r i f J1r I d JGDIJELLT per v BOURBON PARIS KENTUCKY 105 1906 y 1 1 i v I h t Ci ii i 1li f 2 t i NEWS ii Jr rt 9 r r q- c iI I T s i lid A + Sell Other things But Our v V Mountain Ash Jellico and and New Diamond f make Daily for Satisfied Customers all Cbe County STUART OBRIEN Directly Opp L N Depot IIW tOOt 1- fj I 1 Us I v f L I T e i COALS Ouer r I SEE SALOSHIN For All the Leading of Whiskies Wines and Brandies I tarry a large line of all kinds of Whiskies bottled in bond VanHook Old Pepper Mellwood Sam Clay and Chicken Cock Fine old Cherry Wine old Port Wine Wine Duffys Perre Malt Whisky best 2 per gal VanHook Whisky in Paris Bavarian ex port bottled Beer 5C per bottle Sandwitches of all kinds 5Q each L SALOSHIN Both Phone Home 255 E Tenn 29 Corner Main and Seventh Paris Ky THE 31 S- Having consolidated Livery Stables I can be found in the future at the Middle Stable 1 where we will be able to furnish the best of Livery 1 of all kinds at reasonable charges i1 Horses boarded by day week or month 1 1 Special attention given to furnishing of g m for Parties Balls Funerals Etc my 1 Wm Hinton Jr i EXECUTOR ADMINISTRATOR Lexington Banking and Trust Cor Wfarkct and Short Struts jpLexington Kq Capital Stock J 600000 00 A u 600000 00 mi I Our facilities for meeting wftiits of pres ffiS out and prospective customers are equal to any Jin the State We you to call jOt 3 per cent interest on time and j savings deposits jijrr S i I r i A S Brand S I I i Blackberry 1 i if T iiiiiiiiiiiii lI Phones I n i mytwo carriages f 1JtrF n t t l II 0 II i l rt y t lU Jif rr r ir Jr x xi t m I iifItlii i I I tii mJ i C Jl S o I 7 ti Stock Hold rs Liabilities tt rr i t 00 L rotectlon 5f k1f Trust State t v j y yj 111 1 l lIII f 1J i J I J I t4 tit zit 71 7 fl i v Z 7 j t I J it OTIrf j tN I q A gbdliNl lhN Lw r4 iy r i irl1 I i 1 1 q tl v r rq t Pi 1200000 xk grill the Largest Bank and Company xin the r GUARDIAN9r r r MY v r w + = = FOR RENT Five nicely furnished rooms for rent for gents Central locationM I have a large stock of the famous Block Gas Lamps Lamp and mantel complete only 50 cents tf J J CONNELLY Williams Kidney Pills Have you neglected your Kidneys Have you overworked your nervous system and caused trouble with your Kidneys and Bladder Have you pains in the loins side back groins and bladder Have you a flabby ap pearance of the face especially under the eyes Too frequent desire to pass urine If so Williams Kidney Pills will cure you Sample free By mail 50 cents Sold by Oberdorfer WILLIAMS MFG Co Props Cleveland 0 A calloused hand is better thana heart Williams Carbolic Sa Ive With Arnic and Witch Hazel The best Salve in the world for Cuts Bruises Sores Ulcers Salt Rheum Tetter Hands and all skin eruptions It is guaranteed to give satisfaction or re funded Price 25c by Druggists WILLIAMS MPG O For sale by Oberdorfer If you will try a case of the famous Lion Beer the best on earth and are not pleased with it we will gladly fund your money All doctors this beer for family use and for convalescents T F BRANNON 3jy2mo Agent Lion Brewing Co SOUTHERN RAILWAY Shortest and Quickest Route ST LOUIS AND THE WEST without with cars from Lexington as follows Lv Lexington 545 am Lv Danville 530 am i Lv Louisville 900 am Ar St Louis 612 pm Lv Lexington 500 pm Lv Danville 545 pm Lv Louisville 1015 pin Ar St Louis 732 am Vestibuled Coaches and Observa tion Cafe and day trains Pullman sleeper and Free Reclinnig Chair Car on night train in connection with Queen Crescent Route Most direct line tp Atlanta Knoxville Charleston Flor Land of the Sky and Sapphire country Send twocent for Land of the Sky booklet and other illus trated literature W G Morgan D T A Lexing ton Ky T P A Lexington Ky A R Cook 0 P T A Louis ville Ky C Hungerford A Louis ville G B Allen A G P A at St Louis Mo i I I calloused PropsCleveland Ire i i runningthroughI e J I includingAshville LexingtonJ F Logan DP I recommend i TO I connecting DAD OF SPELLING REFORM Joel Barlow Introduced Phonetics Im Revolutionary Days Spelling reform is no new thing In the past century it has manifested in many different phases At the beginning of the last century a fad was started for making all compound proper names one word Thus New York became Newyork New England Kewenglaud Rhode Island Rhodeis laud New Jersey Newjersey etc Jpel Barlow was the most eminent illustra tor of this reform Joel and all his works are forgotten now but when he published his Cohmibiad in 1807 he was looked upon as the great literary light of America Tool was the best seller of his days He copied the stilted and arti fieinl style of Pope without however possessing any of Pops genius Born in Connecticut 1754 Barlow was in his young mauhood a member of a now forgotten coterie of literary persons known as the Hartford wits to whom the new republic looked for an example of all that was elegant and proper in literature The Hartford wits all spelled Rhode Island Rhodeisland of course and the purists and dis tressingly literary characters of the time followed their example Even as late as 1827 some authors who strove for supernatural elegance und correct ness referred to Xewyorklmy and Long islaudsound The mighty Joel went to live In France Iu 1788 got mixed up with the French revolution mid barely escaped with his head He spent the greater part of his life in France being United States minister there in 181112 and did most of his writing there In the latter year he died near Cracow Po land and his reformed system of spell iug gradually went out of use A good idea of Barlows literary style though not of his reformed spelling is furnish ed by the following extract from the once lauded and now forgotten Colum bind It describes the retreat from Bunker Hill There strides bold Putnam and from all the plains Calls the tired troops the tardy rear sus tains And mid the whizzing balls that skim the lowe Waves back his sword defies the follow ing foe Whizzing balls that skim the lowe Is good The lowe whatever it was doubtless needed skimming and that Putnam was getting away about as fast as ho could it was very creditable of him though perhaps unnecessary to wave back his sword and the following foe who were trying to catch him But the great Joel and his poem hailed as immortal have gone along with his reformed system of spelling to join the doughty shade of Old Put a centtipy ago and the present generation must deal with a new set of faddists New York Press The Pearl The pearl is the one gem that comes to us perfect from the hand of nature and to this its great antiquity as a gem Is largely due Precious stones whose beauty and brilliance depend on pol ishing and cutting would naturally be discovered and utilized later The dis covery of the diamond for instance probably dates within historic times Though known earlier it was not included hmoug the gem treas ures of royalty even as late as the sev enth century The modern cutting of diamonds in regular facets was In vented as recently as 14 G Indeed it is quite probable that the pearl was the first gem known and treasured by prehistoric man since the search for food must have been the first occupa tion of the earliest of the race and the shining pearl would thus have been discovered in river mussels if not In marine oysters Certain it is that the Old Testament and the ancient writ ten histories allude to pearls and that remoter evidence is found in the tombs and excavated cities of still earlier eras The Egyptians Babylonians and Assyrians held the pearl in an esteem verging on reverence For Black Eyes It is often the case that people meet with accidents stud bruises that cause disfiguring discolorations from which they suffer not a little embarrassment and annoyance It is worth while to know that there Is a simple remedy and one quite within the reach of every one Immediately after the accident mix an equal quantity of capsicum an num with mucilage made of gum ara bic To this add a few drops of glyc erin The bruised surface should be carefully cleansed and dried then painted all over with the capsicum preparation Use a camels hair brush and allow it to dry then put on the second or third coat as soon as the first is entirely absorbed A medical journal Is authority for the statement that if this curse is pursued immedi ately after the injury discoloration of the bruised tissue will be wholly pre vented It is also said that this reme dy is unequaled as a cure for rheuma tism or stiffness of the neck Insure with W 0 Hinton He has the right kind of insurance itself ill considering I I I defy generally i j i j j I j j j Moon Heat Many people suppose that moonlight possesses great potency and has influence on or over animate and inanimate things ou our planet Such persons should remember that moonlight is only reflected sunlight and that the quality and quantity of the light thus reflected are not what is generally imagined In fact it is a truth which has often been demonstrat fcd by the speculative astronomers that It would take 018000 full moons to afford an amount of light equal to that emitted by the sun and furthermore there is only sky space for 75000 such disks Some heat comes from moon light However it Is in quantities so small that it cannot be measured by ordinary instruments Flammarion says that the amount of heat emitted by a full moon while at its zenith can not be more than one eightythou sandth of the amount that the sun j when standing on the meridian on a favorable day in July Such be j ing the case it is really surprising that intelligent people should consider j that the moon has such a wonderful influence over terrestrial affairsI The Rlilnoccros Bird Among the birds not commonly found is tile rhinoceros bird from the Trails vaal Buffel pikker is its Dutch name i Its habits are remarkable and its plum age unusual Small flocks accompany j most of the large antelopes the buffa j hoes and the rhinoceroses in South Af rica and run all over the creatures bodies picking off flies and insects When an enemy approaches the buffel j sit in a line with heads raised on the back of the animal they like sparrows on a roof ridge and signal the enemy in sight The plumage Is curiously close uniform and f compact so touch so that the bird has au artificial look as if covered with j painted satin and not with feathers j j The general tint of the body is cinna neon brown with yellow beak and legs j giving the color effect of a brown and yellow iris A Turner Story Very few London dealers indeed are competent to judge Turners works that is without a certified history A lady acquaintance of mine had a large ing to sell it she offered it to five or six of the leading dealers but not one of them would buy it at any price as sorting that Turner never saw it that it was nothing his work and pers showing that the picture had been specially painted by Turner for her husbands father and in a week she had sold the work for 22SO The dealer is almost frightened to touch a Turner and you seldom or see one exposed for sale in the gal leries Chambers Journal Our Foolish Alphabet Why think of it Weve not even a reputable alphabet The letters are all i tangled up J is J whefl t isnt Y and more than half the time Y is duty for I S is sometimes Z G is J and poor C is always S or K j Weve got four distinct ways to the N sound pn kn and n j four to write terminal sound the letters ough uff awf ow 00 and o And there are no rules head And this is work for babes Mary Bronson Hartt in Womans Home Companion Color and Aroma of Coffee There are two things which people imagine are guides to the goodness of coffee which are really of no conse quence whatever They are the color of the and the aroma of the coffee when ground or as it escapes from the pot in drawing The color is due almost entirely to the roasting This is true also of tea The finest coffees and teas when properly and prepared to give out their finest flavors will color the water but little The real essences which give the flavor have practically no color A professor at one of the Australian universities informed his class that the hour in the day is in the middle of the night at 3 oclock in the morning On another occasion the same professor made his apology for the intricacies of a statement by add ing I cant give you an easier without making it more To Make It Tender Waiter called the customer in the restaurant where an orchestra was playing Yes sal Kindly the leader of the to play something sad and low while I dine I want to see if it wont have a softening influence on this steak Milwaukee Sentinel His Father My son do you know that most of the rich men of today began poor Small Soil Yes sir Father And yet instead of saving your pen nies you spend them SmKll Sok Yes sIr When I I vant I awon derful Iil l ers are I alIt and- i I I i doing I I ways the ar or and ir five ways to I I I decoction r I I t Mixed rec I difficult I I I tell I I I sta tout tI supplies attending like doesav- erage never either express syllable erer i separately roasted darkest explanation orchestra Ambition begin poor STRANGE ADVICE Ii Dr G G Green alert atteauaa to his great humanitarian contract JIn our Almanac for years past wft have given unusual advice to those ted with colds throat or lung troubles or consumption We have told them if they not any special benefit after the use of one 75cent bottle of German Syrup to consult doctor CJWe not ask them or them to use a large number of asl is the case the advertising of mazy other remedies Our confidence in Syrup makes it possible for us toi such JWe know by the ex perience of over 35 years that one 75cent lieve or cure the worst coughs bronchial or lung troubles that even in bad cases consumption one bottle of German Syrup work wonders CjfNew trial 250 reg war size 750 At all druggists J G S VARDEN Free Reclining Chair Cars I The Southern Railway has free reclining chair car between and Evansville on their fast through trains leaving at 730 a m and 5 mv and running solid to Evansville with out change This line also operates free chair cars on night Lexington and Danville to St Louis also Pullman Sleeper through from Danville to St Louis The Southern Railway is 23 miles the shortest from Louisville to Nashville and fortythree miles the shortest to St Louis tf BLOCK LIGHTS in I have a large stock of the famous Block Gas Lamps Lamp and mantel complete only 50 cents tf J J For Sale Privately I offer for sale privately my hone on Higgins avenue adjoining the residence of Wm Howard It contains four rooms 3 newly papered pantry and large clothes press This is off the oest located cottage properties in Paris and will command afirst class tenant 1 he house is new and 111 excellent repair cistern at door a nice little home or a good permanent investment Terms liberal if wanted Possession given about Sep tember 1st For further information apply to the undersigned at the Dem office LEWIS T LILLESTON The Cynthiana Fair August 1 3 4 Smitties Band Floral Hall Trot ting Liberal premiums Write for catalogue Good News to Women Father Williams Indian Tea Natures Remedy is becoming the most popular in use Pale Weak Nervous Delicate nesses and diseases peculiar to their sex will find in Father Williams Indian Tea a wonderful Tonic and Regulator It quiets the Nerves on flesh gives strength and elasticity to the step the eyes the complexion and makes you well and strong again Tea or Tablets 20 ents For sale by W T Brooks Huge Task It was a hugh task to undert4keie ease as that of C F Collie okee Iowa but Electric Bu it He writes pression In Electric ever I found a cjire a was restored t stomach Gu fer the djruggij ers Ear rsonal bottles German Syrup will speedily xei d SOD service i CONNELLY rF 7 always Willmake W i 10 f A WARD M 7HMrS Af AN A MONTH T M FORIE P1AT 0 J tP E U ES AN tcOUiflsHMEN7 JrS Y I 4iaPT1f e I OW EtChe tSlts Ic earl trett dIOO 1 sizes urge German i 1 1 inaugurated Louisville 1 r j oils r 2ty i t j Women from those weak i 4 cure of sucha bad case of kilne d f e s ii i My kid s e far gone I could not s ai without a cushion an dmdreadful backache he a s be i feot t recommend this to all with we 1i si c itiTL9i t 0- t t7 J Y IN NURS1Wt lib THH tLQ IME C SCOrP CSld UQ EAFlRETSO E sSend fo lerd i k 4drn S U + = = = THE BpiOjRBON NEWS PARIS KENTUCKy AUG 10 1906 00 I F J lJI i f j i iI FT 3- ITTHTiTT5T75 ii a lSrL T I- sC 5o Per Cent or 2 Off PRICE C0SSacrifice Sale in Corner Room Continues for 30 Days Suits at 4 00 worth S 00 Suits at 4 50 worth 9 00 Suits at 5 00 worthV 10 00 Suits at 5 75 worth v 1L 50 Suits at GOO worth V 12 00 Suits at 6 75 worth 13 50 Suits at 700v ty v 14 00 Suits at worth 1G 00 Suits at 9 JJ6 worth 13 05 Suits at 1 00 worth A 20 00 Shirts at 3Sc worth 50c Dont miss these bargains 4t OHAS N FITHIAN No interruption to Business during the remodeling of our Store Room JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS l A SIRES Old Stand 330 Main Street ijiiji 4 f 4 f 4 f f 4 I MUM 11 H IS Ml 1 1 111 1 1 i 5 111 1 I Mil ill 11 H HI I n 111 1 M 1111 1 1 1 1 U 1 1 1 1 i Hll I II I HI 1111 1 11 1 1 111 1 1 Clocks Silversmith Paris I 1 1 i o 0 I I tOo i t i I pRICE C0 CLOlJ ERS Ie W f f t1t Vi SHIRE 7 if ft 9 I t f I y i runtrft 41 i 6 ii J g J I I Cloeksa f t I 1 J1 Ky I i I f l worth nun r r ay 2 L 4 4- 4 1 1 fS tithiaai w a L aJ Sa 53 bvbb SL bb 6 Sd dlaya yb y4 Clocks 1 O1ocksaiSS- QUiS lloocsI- I IIII11111111111111I1111IJ11 = = = + ++ ++ + + = = = + = = = = I lie 3- sc L IIrIIMPERFECT IN ORIG1NAL rf- q d n STOCK CKOP c J M Hall carried off 14 premiums at the Cynthiana Fair last week with his herd of Shorthorns the premiums amounted to over 100 J Q Wardolnfiar Paris won first premium on best double harness team regarless of sex color or ownership at the Cynthiana Fair W A Thomason of North Mid dletown sold to Mann Clark five head of mare mules at 190 per head Mr Thomason also sold his crop of bluegrass seed to Bush Nelson of Lex ington at good price Rudolph Davis of Carlisle pur chased fouryearold pacing mare from Jas E Clay Monday for and sold her a few minutes afterwards for a handsome profit M J Farris of Boyle county has just sold to Simon Weil the well known cattle dealer of Lexington 250 head of slop fed catttlo at three and a fourth cents per pound The transfer is to be made in November This is probably the largest sale of made in Boyle county John Ockerman of Cane Ridge sold to W D McIntyre of Millers burg 33 head of 1433pound cattle at 5 cents WjjD McIntyre of Millersburg sold to Hughes and Plummer 250 head of stock ewes at 550 per head MIMurphy sold a bunch to J W Liver at 515 per Pickling Vinegar By your pickling vinegar from Wm Sauer He sells the famous Heintz brand It is pure apple cider vinegar and the best in the world x 2io Loafers Henderson is one city in Kentucky that is almost without or loun ger About six weeks ago her chief of police orders that every lounger and every person found without money or employmentwhether such person be hobo or resident should be locked up Hundreds of men have been hustled out of town by the police and some of them who have never been known to work have secured employment and are making an honest living 4 If You Try Father Will am s Indian Herb or Herb Tablets and do not find the best medicines you ever used for Constipation Torpid Liver Sick Kid neys Sick Headache Bad Breath we will refund the money They work day and night and you i the morning ilenew person Try them 20 cents Tea or Tablets For sale by W T Brooks How to Overcome A schoolmaster once said to his pupils to boy who would make the best piece of composition in five minutes on How to Overcome Habit he would give a prize When the five minutes had expired a lad of nine years stood up and said Whell sir habit is hard to overcome If youtake off the first letter it does not change abit If you take off another letter you still have a bit left If you take off another the whole of it rerrains If you take off another it is totally used up alLof which goes to show that if you want to get rid of habit must off altogether won Lack Up- f I hear your son has been winning high honors at college He has He has been a quarterback Ijalftack a fullback and now Yes what is said the speaker eagerly V replied the other hes a inch as walking along a a when he was between the shoulder ball says the New York ne force of the blow knock and when he got up he a golfer running toward him i you hurt player didnt you get out of the way And why should i get out of the yasked Pat I didnf knoNV here ere assassins around here But I called said the player land when I say four that is sign for get out of the Oh it is is it said Pat Well thin when I say oive its a sign that a 225 stockever 72t aloafer c r IndigestionBilliousness g i H llJit the you thrownjt ResultHe enc w c k 11 I of Fhcs links Nn queriedthe i lour I yQ h ton t cJ r j heads gave habitual them getup ice r hide d a r Now tc a you to way ou are going it the nose Followed Young Bride to Grave M T Jones aged twentyfive died Tuesday jiightat Owingsville of typhoid fevre His vife who was Faller of Bloomfield Ills was but a few short weeksago brought to his home a young bride died a few days ago of the same disese The typhoid of which there are cases in that vicinity is of a malignant type In Ginicnnati they have laundry trust and snow busy it through the mangle Did You Know Father Williams Indian Tea in the Rocky Mountains acts directly on Mucous Membrane the Blood and cleanses the entire system of the microbes and germs of Catarrh Hay Fever Asthma Lucien Young Promoted Commander U S N passed successfully the necessary phy sical examination at navy yard and is now a captain Admiral Lyon com mandant of the navy yard president of the board congratulated Captain Young and presented the former of the Bennington very handsome pair of shoulder straps Pure Vinegar Let ussell you your vinegar We have Heintz apple cider vinegar A trial willjjconviree you that this is the best and cheapest vinegar that is 72t MARGOLEN Living Beyond Ones Means ft is quite certain that a percentage of every class in life is living beyond its means in the effort to make a display keep up appearance and climb into the next higher class observes the Minneapolis Tribune This tendency is always exaggerated by the higher wages and larger profits in a time of prosperity and by the hope it holds out of permanent improvement of condition Every country needs the tonic of panic depression now and then to take the conceit out of its people and them modesy thrift and fore sight is said so often when a man idesjt is a wonder floral emblems are not made containing the words He is better off Dearness Cannot be Cured local applications as they cannot reach the diseased potion of the ear There is only way to cure deafness and that is remedies Deafness is caused by con dition of the mucous lining of the Eus tachian Tube When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound of imperfect hearing and when it is en tirely closed deafness is the result and unless the inflammation can taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh which is noth ing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh that cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure Send for circulars free F co Toledo o Sold by Druggists 75c Take Halls Pills for con stipation x a tianientabic Ignorance It vas day at the and theyoung teacher was proud of her little pupils as they went through their drills and exercises and j beamed with pleasure aithe i shown by the visitors who ap plauded generously according to the Buffalo News Then came the lessen and the teacher announced the subject Children she said today we are to learn about the cat and I want you to tell me what you knew about it Tommy how legs a cat tv Four replied Tommy proudly conscious of rectitude Yes arid j Daisy what else has the cat Claws an tail murmured Daisy i shylyVarious otfter portions of feline were ascertained and finally the instructor turned to one of the acquisitions of kindergarten said sweetly Mary can tell me whether or feathers s With scorn and contempt mingled with a vat surprise Mary said teacher aint you never seen a cat Ajnd the lesson came to an abrupt MissCarrie andwho many very collared the are LuicenYoung witha be had By byconstitutional aninflamed bp j CHEHEY Family vi ting I g ing I I1 has I latest I you cat J Gee putting gathered the commander pure to considerable It one kindergarten 4 appreciation any 1 J anatomy the Now tie has fur i f We Have Placed on Sale Our Remaining Stock of TORGfl FURNITURE At a Cash Discount of 25 Per Cent REFRIGERATOR BABY BUGGIES At 33 13 Per Cent Discount Discounts Apply for Cash Only Goods Charged at Regular Prices JOSW SsSgiSB II fib CANS= FINISHED PICTURES ON THT KODAK PLAIN2 V Load and upload Kodaks anywhere Der i veop without dark room with the Kodak Tank gDeveloper Printed day of night on 5 to 7S Brownie Camaras 1 to 9 T JKsdk Tali Deveoperr5r6 and 7 Jfc Let us show yoti how they work fDAlllliBERTY BHOS 4 4 MalriSt Paris Ky j9f i t iHi i14 i7i t iiAa4 t4 if ii4i iai 4 t4 iTsi 474 il iTA vi i Xul T k 174 iT The Standard Rotary Shuttle Sewing Machine In A11V LiQntafJ MAKE I L V lox 4 YJ t 4r or Iit HI j JI i I f ftt t t to to o k t t J t j t a I s b I Jw odds r F-or yta 41 a = i j j IN iri the World For Sale by O Q I H H a S El g p a r Second streets TWO MACHINES Niir Lock Stitch Chain Stitch The st JV1achi g lI 1 IZ and FaSf is a ran Dissolution By mutual consent the firm of Parker quested tp settle with the undersigned once and holding Claims against firm will present once 76fc P I MCARTHY A dressmaker knows a lot about the Not eJ partnershipAll at J 0 1 r s anyone tome j For Sale and choice seed sale any quantity or call at w 24jlytf A S THOM Mica and coriclusicns are nt sjHf mows yet women at bcth 91clCorn and Whe 11 Oldcorn wtjn eeoffice If jump i Seed BBoth nhonesI21 i c t r KENTUCKY 1906 o r I e n C vr A G 10Ji r n THE OUREON NEW PARIS THE BOURBON NEWS SWIFT CHAMP EDITOR AND OWNER JEWEtERS i SILVERSMITHS OPPOSITE HOUSE v Brent Property Sold old homestead of Judge J Harry Brent on Houston avenue was sold Monday to Hon C M Thomas t9 iou v Oiling Pikes Fayette county 75 miles of turnpike It requires about 7000 of oil to the mile The Indian Re fining plant at Georgetown is the oil Lot Sold GeoB Mosely Co real estate sold yesterday for MrsRebecca Thornton a lot on Third street to F P Loivry who will build handsome resi dence same New Transfer Man Connors who for a number of was the genia and popular land lord of the Fordham Hotel has bought the transfer business of Clark Co having taken possession Saturday Insure your property against fire and wind See us to day McCarthy Board Will Continue in Business j r the dissolution business oOrker James has been wound up Mr G R James will retain the house out for himself with stock of goods in the late fall or early Spring f Mr Parker we understand contemplates gqing east Election Commissioners to Meet J Morgan Chinn chairman of the f State Board of Election Commissioners Wednesday issued a call for a the commission on August 30 purpose of appointing county elec tion al Its Cheaper fow T J is putting oh wallpaper cheaper now than at any season of thg year furniture and ham mo Mara g ing at cost t Am omict unlit DE and Mrs J S Barnes of Nichp laSviile announce the marriage of their daughter Miss Emily Barnes fro Mr Camillus of Horrodsburg The wedding will take place September 11 Miss Barnes is well known in this city where she has often visited George B Mosely Co estate agents sold for D McClintock a lot on Sigh street 57x153 feet to Mrs Frankie Morrison for 650 also Powhattan df Voodford a 166 at 108 per acre and another farm the Shriek Ferry pike iii Woodford at 2 per acre t SltateConyention of Hibernians H ihe State Convention of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Will be held in this city at the Elks Building be ginning on September 10th for two days session The Committee cn appointed by the local lodge is composed of Rev Father James Cusack P I McCarthy MJ Lavin R 0 Gorey Ed Grace Melons on If you want a deilcious watermelon just off the icp up Vm Sauer He has a fine lot on hand 22t Annual Uiile Practice Captain Y K Dodge inspector of the State Guard rifle left Wed Vnospay forHehderson to arrange for thjraimiial rifle practice camp which fJJlbeh ld there this year Captain Dodge hopes to make the practice there the best ever held in this The First Kentucky regiment will go into camp first and the third regiment second The Second Kentucky pf the Lexington company is a mjber will go lat Theyiwill be in of Colonel Allen who re cently promoted from Major and this will be the first encampment in charge a he forI Ea ette gallons i ale Jan rand open new meetings th f t THinton porch I r I TChafham ale Jas sold rr Woolridge farm on I Arrangements I j range ear state which was t r COURT soiling l furnishing s years today s fore ei November 4 h1 Eatn1e s fear They fo if acres ac leeS call ie this recharge = Suitto Be Filed Against Paris Bus Line I Capt Crawford the poet scout and Rev C E Maxfield have been lecturing t and entertaining campers at Parks Hill were guests at the Fordham Hotel Wednesday night They here to spend the night so as ito catch the early train to enable them to make connection cities where they had engagements to lecture last evening but missed the early train and will bring suit at once for damages against the bus line in this city They alleged thaf when they arrived at the L N depot Wednesday ing they asked the bus man that if they purchased a round trip bus ticket to the hotel would he bring them to the 5 30 train Thursday morning that the bus man agreed to do so they purchased the ticket that at 5 oclock Thursday morning the bus was called for by one of the hotel proprietors and the at the other the phone said he would be a minute he did not come and at 5 30 was again and the g n tlemen were informed by him that it too and that they could the train JEhefgentlemen were quite angry as it caused them to miss two of their lecture dates Capt Crawford aft Farm ington la and Rev Maxfield at Farm ington Kas They employed Judge H C Howard to bring suit against the Pars Bus Line at once and paid him a fee for same and ordered him to draw on them for more if needed de would fight the case to a finish Judge Howard states the amount of damages asked for has yetHeen decided on but that the suit will be filed in a few days Traction Company Buys More City Property Bluegrass Traction Company through its attorney T E Mpore Jr has closed the deal with Mr Owsley and Mr Wm Rion for their property on Main street and will begin work at to doaway with the sharp at Main and Fourteenth street The deal also includes a small strip off the rear end of the Cottingham property for which Mr Cottingham re ceives five feet off the Rion property fronting on Main street and adjoining thatofhis own The price was 2 500 for the Owsley property and 3000 for the Rion Home stead The track around Forteenth street will remain and be utilized as a switch the Traction Company facilities fpr switching city and from grounds without with the schedule of regular cars from Lexington BIKTHS r v f At Charleston W Va to the wife of John Morrison nee Miss Birdie But ler a son f See Us Before SelJiu your Wheat t Will pay highest market price for your wheat delivered at the milLor any station in Bourbon or adjoining coun ties See us before selling PARIS MILLING CO DEATHS Lucile the four month old daugh Mr Mrs B M McKenney I died Tuesday afternoon at 4 of inflamTnation of the bowleg N The funeral held at 2 30 oclock afterrtcToh from the residence Burial at Paris cemetery Bury Kegro Captiiredby Toati Browner1 I I Geo Browner was ruining a fishing up Stoner about 11 Wednesday nighht he foun his way at the L N freight depot by a passing freight train While waiting for it to pass a big bur liy man jumped from between tW0Qf the cars almost into his arms Mr Browner at once run his hand him as if in the act of drawing a weapoji and put the negro under ar rest He then marched jaiL At the Smith Wesson 33cali ber revolverwas found in one of thes negros Jailer Judy He orKichard Hardee and said he from Falmobth Mr Browner thotishC thb negro had committed some j j and concluded to run him in ViiI be taken befqr Judge Fletcher Mann to answer the charge of carry ing concealed deadly Weapons Mr Browner was not armed at tie time and displayed considerable in making the arrest He made negro march in front of him to the jail Ja who r guaranteeto and man I endof therein Vas tften not ri they I once I thusaffording to I 1 I I terof 1G I J I I I When nom j negro I to jails I bY then I pib yin a HarQEe I I I thee i the came for two even called lip late i age retaining Glaring I not The carve 5 cars the fair interfering r I and i lock was Wednesday t 3 camp clockn blocked behind him ih socl gave me was Crime neighboring city nave = Mrs Edith ABronstoh is visiting friends in Midway Judge J J Osborne of Cyrithiana was inlthe city yesterday Rev Dr Dickson of Arkansas is a guset of his son Hon E M Dick son Miss Mary Brent has returned from to friends in County Attorney T E Moore is spending at Olympian Springs t Elks Band will give another of its delightful dances at the Elks building tonight Willard Hutchion and wife are guests of the formers mother Mrs Chas Foote I Misses Betsey Ray sand Janie Marsh left yesterday for a trip to Ni Falls r V Mgs Belle Hutchion Qf San is the guest of her kinsman Mr John B Kennedy Mrs Mattie Varden Hutchcraft and son Arthurare White Sul phur Springs W Va Mr and Mrs Keene Lutes and two childern are visiting relatives at Stan ford Lincoln county Mrs Nathan Bayles Jr left Wed nesday to isit aunt Mrs Same Embrj Miss Lucille of Little Rock neighborhood left this week to visit Miss Lizzie Peoples of Butler rMisses Pauilneand Fannie Bell Master Thomas Pr of Hunting ton W Va are giiesst of their aunt Mrs T J Pritohard Mrs A Dougherty and sistersMisses Mary and Marguerite Hilan of are guests of Mrs J T Calnan at Maplelawn near town MisS Saille Morgan of Lexington is the guest of the Misses Holladay who entertained Saturday with a beautiful buffet luncheon in her honor Mrs George Aleaxnder yes terday for NeV York to visit her sister Mrs Oscar Taylor and they go to gether for a visit to Canada Mr and Mrs Louis H Clamp of Austin Tex and Kittie Cogar Calvert of Covington are guests of Mr and Mrs Thos Mr and Mrs L Mussinon left Wednesday to visit relatives at Cincin nati and Ripley 0 They will go to Old Comfort before returning home Miss Hattie MaeEckman of Cov ington is the guest of her uncle grandmother Charles S Clark nd Mrs M A Clark on PJeasant street x Mr J H David of San Antonio Tex is the guest of relatives in the county He was formerly of this county and this is his first visit since leaving Kentugky 33 years ago JFinaf Examination The final examination for white eachers will be held Supreintendent McGhjesneys office next Friday and Saturday Water for Fair Stock The Bourbon Agricultural Society has closed a contract with the Water Works Company to run a 2 inch pipe from the main at Clintonville pike to the stables on the grounds Work will be begun Monday and rap idly pushed to a finish Running Water and Content Sold Woodford Clay has cold Running Content crack fillies Wednesday to the for 25 000 The former won the big Alabama Stakes at Saratoga yester day Public Sale of Privileges FOR Bourbon County Fair Sept 6 78 1906 On the Fair Grounds on August 15th1906 the Committeeon Privileges of the Bourbon County Fair Association will sell at public auction to the highest following privileges Dining Room Lunch Counter Ice Cream Soda Water Lemonade Bot tied Sort Drinks Candy Cigars Fruits Watermelon Check Room Candy Floss Machine All privileges A cash payment o 10 pf the amount bid must on day of sale GEO RASSENFOSS Chairman PERSONALS visit h Master Richmond and- hard left j and I I CountYl I V at rand Newcastlestables I 4r 45 I Hitchingand J are 1 deposited r several Louisville a few days t agars Francisco her at IIopkins Cincinnati t Missa his er Point his biddethe exclusive b LaugttJ = = = Master in an irritated mood I say I say Here Just tell who laid the breakfast this morning Servant timidly I did if you please sir all except the eggs c The chorus girls profess to be willing to testify in the Thaw ease should be reminded1 that they will be under oath when called to tell their ages will furnish Cannon and a large collection of air guns Class in Piano Nellie Buckner will epen her class in piano September 10 414 HIGH STREET FairEnougu If you will try a case of the famous Lion Beer the best and are pleased with it we will fund your money All doctors recom mend this beer for family use and for convalescents T F BRANNON 3jy2mo Agent Lion Brewing Co IGE TEA In Pans Kippered Herrings Olive Salad Peanut Butter Neufchatei Brick Phil Cream Cheesy Bents Biscuits me Upon equipmentfor iiI L ft on earth not ire r ir 82 ItThe t I 11 11 0 R c f 0 I m r I ca i I iI LUnchfioods III I i I I IIt I IiU w tIItSJ f t Who o one gladly I r t us ee rwss r J 2t Yr Reduced prices oil Shirt Waists and Corset Covers I f il j 1 4 1 I 1 I I 0- 1 Ea Tuckers I r I FOR AUGUST Special Prices on the To Refrigerators Old Hickory Lawn Goods Lawn Benches V Porch Shades Straw Mattings Carpets Lace Curtains Hammocks and Jardineers Come in and get a bargain Undertaking in all its brandies Embalming1 jft sceiiitifically attended to JV L I 1 H g i I 0 j I l 1 I I 0 0 Ii AlVIBULANOE f iI T t I 1 tl JT HNTON- i jfae James eans oe en The finest material the most thorough scientigc last modern methods Vlly B job lot Slioes wheii you can get new uptodate goods at jobs OUR CLOTHING Cut to pieces that will make DRY GOODS Y J Gbnsisfein of White GoodsvLavns Dimities Hamburgs Laces c all going afbargain prices y 4if Coaijplete stock of Ladies and Gents FiirnisJnngGpocls at educed prices Shoes for Women and Children v lljM Dw J ryvcH1Ml t tWoI Par o th l lice of L yo 4 5 rselL I I I F Rummans Tucker b Cos then s LIen = THE BOURBON 1906 a NEWS KENTUO Yf t i t J Q x 0 T r t 7Hr a i t JRfiI r- R r FTT PARIS AUG 10 + THE TALE OF THE EYE DISPOSITION IS REVEALED IN THE COLOR OF THE OPTICS The Eye la Not Black and It Fades The Steely Gray the Green and the Sweet Brown Eye Eyea of Shakespeare Coleridge and Byron It has been remarked by those who Ere most conversant with the anatomy of the optic that the darkest hued eye is most susceptible to change The fading of the black eye is no secret as it is almost universal and this is natural and accounted for from the known fact that the black eye is not black but a yellow of deep color and sometimes found in combination with one or more colors The light blue and the gray seem to be the most lasting The gray eye is an almost universal characteristic of men and women of great intellect Shakespeare had deep gray eyes which were remarkable for their near approach to blue Up to the death of the poet the original color remained Lord Byron had the gray eye of the poet Coleridge algo Gael gray eyes but like Shakespeare and Byron the gray was at times and under mental excitement particularly tinted with another color One biographer of Lord Byron tells of his beautiful changeable gray eyes as one of the chief features of his physiognomy jThe eye of Coleridge was of a greenish may It is an undeniable fact that the col ors most common to the gray blue hazel and black or what is called black are seldom found in all the purity of the color the black eye it is distance only that makes it appear to be purely black for the reason that the deep brown color is in such strong con trast to the white of the eye that the pupil always appears black There are also eyes of so bright a ha zel as to seem almost yellow and there are eyes that bear out the often reiter ated remark concerning green eyed Jealousy for they are to all appear ances positively green It is frequently the case that they are very beautiful when they are shaded often the case with very longand dark eye lashes but though beautiful they are not indicative of a good disposition and belong particularly to a person of jeal ous temperament Clear light blue eyes with a calm steadfastness in their glance are said to be indicative of a cheerful disposition of a serene temper and of a constant nature The light blue eye is peculiar to the northern nations and it is mostly to be found amOng the Swedes and the Scotch Among the rare blonds of the southern portions of Europe is also found the blue eye The pleasant light blue eye with the lioresf glance must not be confounded with another sort of eye pale blue almost steel colored hue which has a continually shifting sort of lotion both of the eyelids and the pu pits Human beings having eyes such as these should be avoided for the col or is indicative of a deceitful and selfish nature Very dark eyes with something of the tint of the violet show great power of affection and purity of mind but it is remarked of these that the pos sessor of such eyes is seldom a person of much intellectuality It is the uni versal opinion that blue eyes are more significant of tenderness and of a yielding of purpose than either the brown black or gray eyes Concerning the constancy the person it is agreed that blue eyed people are not like those of hazel and yellow eyes but it is certain that they yield from affection for those they love and only for those remaining constant in every other case and even under the strongest temptation Gray eyes with a greenish tint and with orange as well as blue in them and which are of ever varying tints resembling in this respect the sea are Indicative of most intellectuality These are especially indicative of impulsive impressionable temperaments Passionate ardor in love is to be found In the man or woman who pos sesses black eyes or what are considered such The brown eyes when not of the yellowish tint butpure russet brown show an affectionate disposition and the darker the is the more they verge on to that deepest of brown color in eyes we are in the habit of calling black the more ardent and pas sionate is the power of affection while it is agreed that the love of persons with black eyes is most lasting of all The brown eyes that do not appear to the observer black that is to say those which are not sufficiently dark to the eyes of sweet gentle and unselfish natures without the inconsistency of the light brown or as they been called and which little more to be trusted than the green eyes Although their praises aie often sung in Spanish ballads green eyes show find coquetry in their owner Sometimes eyes are to be found with a combination of yellow and blue the latter color generally appear tug in streaks over the whole surface o the eyes while the orange yet low Are set In hakes of unequal size and at some distance from a iJLteye EyesQf this tar eyesbrown Individual asis remarkably Clue certain of inconstant 1 brownthat soare have orange dt d little Black r i i characteristic I I Regarding yellow I t I i off i i I i appear frequently are very deceit around rise J UAll = vi tint snow intellect or at a pertain originality of character No commonplace nature has this particu lar kind of eyes Hasty and irritable people frequently have eyes of a brown ish tint inclined to a greenish hue Although the purely green eye indi cates deceit and coquetry the to greenish tints in the eyes is a sign of wisdom and courage Very choleric if they have blue eyes have also certain tints of green in them and when under the influence of anger a sudden refl light appears in them New York Times JOY OF HOUSE BOATING Complete Freedom In Natures Ro muntic KetreatN He who would live the simple nomad ic life in complete freedom and the very heart of natures most romantic retreats must live in a house boat I mean of course a roomy craft that possesses its own motive power that will go wherever the will of its owner directs that will be small enough and sufficiently light of to explore the secret passages the inmost lagoons of the watery wilderness where nature most royally entertains her guests What an idle lazy luxurious roman tic life this is to be sure It is im possible to enthuse too strongly on the merits of such an unfettered A camping launch big enough to ac commodate ones family and a man of all work a combination of guide cook and pilot is the ideal craft and crew for the majority It provides a comfortable habitation a tight roof and a dry bed in all weathers and the supplies needed for an journey in the wilds There are those who prefer the joys of tramping through woods and over mountains carrying their tents canoes and supplies on their backs but their labors are very much greater than those who are luxuriously carried about in their floating camp Its very is the sedative required by the man of strenuous life Reclining in deck chair or hammock he sails among the most beautiful vistas of shimmer ing water and woodland scenery changing his surroundings every hour if need THE CAMEL He a Temper and Ills Bite Is The camel is a dangerous animal to much more dangerous animal than the the reason that with his serpentine neck he can teach round when annoyed and bite his rider Camels are not at all the patient quiet kindly creatures they are They have nasty tempers A cara van crossing the desert Is always noisy The loud and angry snarls of the make the waste places resound A camels bite is a serious matter The strong teeth lock in the wound and a circular motion is given to the jaw around and then back before the teeth are withdrawn again The wound is a horrible one Thore are Pew camel drivers without camel scars Dr Nachtigal the celebrated African explorer once said to a youth who ex pressed a sentimental desire to cross the Sahara on camel back Young man Ill tell you how you can get a partial idea of what riding a camel in an African desert is like Take an office stool screw it up as high as possible and put it along with a savage dog into a wagon without any springs Then seat yourself on the stool and have it driven over uneven and rocky ground luring the hottest parts of July and August being care ful not to eat or drink more than once every two days and letting the dog bite you every four hours This will give you a faint idea of the exquisite poetry of camel riding in the SaUara St Louis Globe Fifty years ago n qriug to a vet eran expert from Scotland people drank toddy that is to whisky hot water fir 3 It is not nn obsolete beverage even nowi The really mysterious point about this toddy is how it got its name tari or tadi the juice of the cocoanut or other trees which can be turned into a fiery in toxicant by being left to stand If we had a mind to cocoanuts or toddy says Dampier our Malayans of would climb the trees and fetch as many as we would have and a good pot of toddy every morning Probably some Scottish nabob brought the word back with him from the east London Chronicle j A Poser Please pa pleaded t Bobby 9ne more All right said pa closing his book Well say pa began Bobby who Is going to bury the last man that dies rot OHC Them Bones The great are all dying Jones That it neces lary for you to a doctor The olympiads consisted alternately If fortynine fifty months lent independence in I I I I car- rIes al beOutdoors HnM Vie Ion ridea horsefor painted I itnr Toddy is the Hindoostanee nuts s just I lot off doesiht snake o propensity persons r draft MW t lM existence extended restfulness Dangerous camels Denuc rat Toddy tit ss say sugar Achi i men see and n Inconveniently The mayor of one of the communes of Augers had ordered a gamekeeper and a butcher to a madman named Legrand to the St Gemines lunatic asylum On the way the gamekeeper noticed that their charge was in one of his lucid intervals and concluded that he would never consent to be handed over to the authorities It was decided therefore to make him drunk and all three adjourned tothe nearest inn Le grand took his liquor kindly So did the others And when the trio arrived at the asylum the goyernoV could not mate head or tail of their story He therefore wired to the mayor asking him which was the man who was to be detained The replied Le grand but the telegraphist spelled it in two words Le grand the tall one The governor on examining the three men saw that one was much taller than the others so he promptly clapped him into a strait waistcoast and sent the other two away It Was three days later before the error was discovered Forgave could forgive but he wished to do it after proper solicita tion At the beginning of the Danish war Field Marshal Wrajigel who was at the head of the Prussian troops was exceedingly annoyed at one point to be telegraphed not to advance farther and he returned a message telling King William that these diplomatists who spoil the most successful opera tions deserve the gallows After that Bismarck ignored him completely and one day they met at the kings table where it was especially awkward to preserve coldness Wraiigel called everybody du and presently he turned to Bismarck who was seated next him and said My son cant thou not forget No was the curt reply After a pause Wrangel began again My son cant thou not for give With all my heart said Bis marck and the breach was healed The Redwood Redwood forests are practically un harmed by forest fires and it is practice for the lumbermen to fell the trees and peel the bark from them and when the dry season is on set fire to the felled timber and burn the branches and bark and other wreckage without practical injury to the saw logs which procedure would mean dis aster to any other wood Redwood contains no resin or turpentine of any kind and owing to its great resistant qualities in severe climatic conditions is free from cracking or decay where cinders might lodge and start fires When burning jt is easily extinguished with a small quantity of water It has the appearance of burnt cork and is harder tr ignite a second time than at first Scientific American Paris Secondhand Market There is a curious old market near Paris in which everything is sold at second hand Working girls can fit themselves out there from head to foot As a writer says Mimi can sell felthat and buy a straw one ex j change her old dress for a new one and if she likes buy a steak and a salad for her dinner a paper bag of fried potatoes sweets and some flow ers for her window Democracy is king here and no snore attention Is paid to the millionaire who is looking for some thing marvelous which he may pick up cheap than to the man with the wooden leg who wants a new left boot in ex change for a dozen sardine tins five gloves and a stocking Lord Kelvins Bravery Lord Kelvin once performed a daring experiment before a class of students UP the course of his lecture he said that i while a voltage of 3000 or so would be fatal to a man a voltage of some 300 000 would be harmless He was golii j to give a practical illustration on him self but the students cried out Try it on Lord Kelvin cast a look of at his class Didnt I figure it cut myself he said quietly as he walkel to the apparatus and safely turned the tremendous voltage into himself Chinese Cologne The Chinese ladies have an oddkind of is to say they have upon person a small bag of sweet smelling gum similar to that which was used by the ancient Egyptian women Numerous costly jars recently unearthed at Pyramid contain the cosmetics and perfumes which were used by Egyptian prin cesses all of which bear a resemblance to those in vogue today among Chinese ladies of the highest rank Sorry He Spoke He Id like to what enjoyment you can find in going from store to store looking at things you havent the least idea of buying She I know I cant them but there is a sort of pleasure in thinking that I could have bought them if had mar vied George Scads when had the chance instead of taking Coldly Described So you dont envy tiny of tile of genius No answered Mr Cumror I ad mire but I dont envy em A genius ia man who gets a monument ttdr lies instead of three square taeliS a day While lies living l Ts4- l Bismarck a f common i i a log I colognethat b I Iyou j s r tale mayor Bismarck he told rep oain constantly their know melancholy world men dead g s f i j j j i MAKING Quick Vorlc In Turning Oat Garden Implements The first hoe ever made consisted of a pointed or forked stick and it was used both for preparing the ground for planting and in tearing out weeds This was perhaps 3000 years Christ hut it remained for the nine teenth century to witness the intrdduc thou of really modern tools for the cul tivation of the soil Since then the has been remarkably rapid until it is possible to produce a ern hoe rake or fork in about five min rates I mean by this that the actual operations through which each tool passes aside from the time which the handles must remain in hot water being bent would not exceed the time specified I The steel for garden tools is in great quantities at Tohnstown Pa from which place it is shipped to tool factories in the shape of fiat bars a half inch thick The wood which is used most for handles is second growth white ash and is cut in Tennessee and Georgia A number of fac torles receive the handles already made I Laying been turned out in the immeI diate of the timber supply Fish oil for the tools as they are made Is another of the important products from a distance necessary to the making of our modern garden tools It is brought from Gloucester N H The bars of steel once at the tool n after which one bar time is placed In a stamping machine and cut into the blanks or patterns for rakes hoes or forks The pattern for an article comprises the metal for the hoe rake or fork proper and the shank The shank is that part of the pattern to which when completed the handle will be attached After the shank has been drawn out to a desired length the remainder of the blank which is to comprise the hoe proper is again heated and is placed between huge metal rolls which as they continue to revolve flatten it into a sheet the thickness of a hoe This sheet then taken to a die which is just the size of a hoe and with a single j stroke the form of the hoe blade is The shank is given Its curved appearance in a form While hot the embryo hoe is immersed in the fish oil for hardening If a socket is to be used in attaching the handle the socket is welded to the shank Otherwise It is known as a shank hoe In pol fishing a hoe it is first ground upon a grindstone and then held buffing wheel On some hoes the shank j is bronzed with a brush but thus is not until after the handles have been put in place Philadelphia Record The Drug Store Morgue i Every drug store has its morgue in which repose bottles of uncalled for medicine Seldom a week passes that we do not put up a prescription that is never called for said one druggist Why In the world the people that thus neg sect their remedies after ordering them compounded will go to the trouble of consulting a doctor is more than I can figure out If they dont want to take prescribed they certainly dont have to hilt they might at least have the grace to come and take it home after we have gone to the trouble to prepare it and not back a dead loss on our hands In most cases we keep the mixture indefinitely hop Ing that the customer will show up time and ask for the bottle Ifi we happen to know the delinquents address send it around C 0 D but people who make a practice of or dering medicine that they newer intend to take are not likely to leaVe their cards with the druggist New York Sun Hard and Soft Water All natural waters contain a greater or less amount of mineral water in so lution Rainwater has the smallest percentage of solid impurities of any and therefore it is taken stand j ard variety of soft water The terms j and hard however as applied to water are scientifically considered purely relative A water is reckoned to be when it contains less than one fivethousaudtl part of its weight of mineral ingredients and hard when it contains more than one four Soft water has the prop erty of easily forming a with soap and is therefore suitable for washing purposes while harp water will only form a lather and that with considerable difficulty A mineral water has more than one twothousandth of its weight of natural dissolved solids and amedicinal water is a variety of mineral water a varying percentage of dissolved natural solid drugs Word Peculiarities A respectable English critic still insists upon pro uouncingtlje name of the racing event Derby instead of Dar by although almost nobody who is not either American or hopelessly old fashioned any longer calls a dark a clurk There is really no doubt as to the pronunciation of the name of great race since it take its name from the Earl qf Berths title which is takep I before made i tempering factory are made red hot in furnace ata is againsta the throw it some we I i i soft I soft lather imperfectly containing or minority writ s an chtssI 1 HOGS ev- olutioni clod before Arkansas c acquired oar stuff as the usually thousandth gaseous tree j = Sorghum SeedV All Varieties Millet Seed Alfafa Clover Seed Chas S Brent Bro Both Phones 14 I PAR28 BENTUO Y I E A THE FOOS JR A 2Horse Power Engine Built by The Engine Co Springfield O I Foos Gas j BROWN VARNEY SELLING AGENTS 311 Main Street Cincinnati 0 I I I The simplicity of this type is clearly shown by the above cut ditions where the attention received is often limited LIMITED EXCURSION 10 MAMMOTH CAVE W Young Mens Institute of Lexington Ky August 2S1250 FOR THE ROUND TRIP t Including Railroad Fare Cave Fees and Hotel Fare c For further information call on or address JOHN B SHANNON f Trust Building R J WALLACE 590 West Main or DAN J CROWE y j 129 Rand avenue Lexington Ky particularlye e j W lit W t t t1I l1 s = from the hundred of West Derby in Lancashire which is Darby to local speech There is evidence as to the pronunciation of the name as far back as 16GO in the fact that a writer who had evidently only heard the name spoken then referred to the Comte It is an exam pre of the capriciousness of language that while Darby dark and are recognized as correct sar rant and sarpent are vulgar and in the case of null parson we nctually have the same word special zed into two A very clever veterinary had a sys tern all his own When he received an overfed toy dog consign him to a disused brick oven with a crust of bread an onion and an old boot When the dog began to the bread the anxious mistress was informed that her darling was doing nicely When It commenced operations on the onion word was sent that the pet was de cidedly better but wfien the animal tackled the boot my lady was gratified hear that her precious pet was ready to be removed Womans Home Companion How It Started Talk about human beings having descended from such as you exclaim ed Poll Theyre much more likely to have evolved from birds You cant speak their language and I I dont deny responded Jocko that they got their long tongues froin your family It was then that the two had their celebrated monkey and parrot time Chicago Tribune N A French Englishmen To an American a Frenchman waxed mustachio and extraordinary stovepipe hat In Chaise the French idea of an Englishman is given He speaks French with a shock ing accent ends every with all right and lie Is introduced to a woman does nfl his cap from his head or his pipe from his mouth r Graft on n Family Tree Guest at anniversary You belong to one branch of the hosts fam ily I believe Poor Ibelong to the branch had any plums on i TitBits Taking things means a hard siege o aying I I 1 French I I dArhie sar- I ant Curing u PUlllperetl Pet hewould gnaw to View of isa t Re S that Easy according person l ran when remove t rfldver r = Professional Cards WM KENNEY W K Drs Kenney Dndley Office Opp Fordham Hotel C 8 to 930 a m OFFICE HOURS 130 to 3 p m 7 to 8 p m PHONES 136 PRACTICING PHYSICIAN ATTOENEYATLAW Room 1 Elks Building i BARNES Home Phone 72 DK J T BROWN Office over Oberdorfers Eri Store Home Phone 258 E Tenn 521 THE ROUTE LOCAL TIME TABLE Lv Frankfort at 620 am and 200 pIt Ar Geotown 712 am and 247 pm Ar at Paris at 750 am and 325 pin pmArAr at Frankfort 1125 am and 720 pm Close connection made atParis with trains to and from Cincinnati Mays ville Cynthiana Winchester anti Richmond Connections made at Georgetown with the Southern GEO B HARPER Tres and Gen Supt 0 W HAY G P A To Remove Freckles A Pimples DUDLEY Dil A H IELLER BuildingParis J J VII J Room 8 Elks frankfon MIDLAND I e J ATTORNEYAT Builder G1t = Sa Tern Days Use Nadinola CREAM a discov ery sold under a positive guarantee and refunded if it falls to remove freckles pimples livei dls eoloratlons blackheads and all eruptions skin no matter standing Cures ordinary cases 10 days and the worst In SO days are sallowness of hoW fter these defects removed the skin will be dew soft and beautiful NQ possible barm can from use cents ad 41 00 by leading stores oc mall NATIONAL COMPANY Teen l res Paris O TOILET V J 0CIII II d Qo V ri Xt1 W f 1 t if i TTii JIITiP rat rr es1 J K 2 + GOAL What 7s Coal An amorphous substance derived from the vegetation of prehistoric ages consisting of different kinds of hydrocarbons found in beds or veins in the earth and used for fuel Also found in great abundance at fDodsons CoaljYards WCv i yiSrEisji Coal BLACKBERRIES Received fresh every day Get your order in early for the first berries are always the best and cheapest Phone us your order at once and will deliver your berries picked the same day LOGAN HOWARD aGo JWWW REMEMBER Big Bargain Dry Goods Silks Dress Goods Ladies Readymade Garments Shoes Oxfords f Millinery Etc TWIN Dry Goods Shoes and Millinery Department PARIS KENTUCKY GEO W DAVIS FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND LICENSED EMBALMER BOTH PHOHES DAT 137 NIGHT 299 i i II t I I I I i I 1f wm r a I I we c ale I i I I BRO I 11 J I J 1NvrN NfKNvtVNN r J o soNtrain FEed I I MMiAwM r = Clarke transfer 0o Office tenth Service Prompt and Courteous HomaJPhqne 323 or and high V T hone eo4 V Paris and Lexington Interurban Lexington every hour from 6 a m to 7 p mj 9 aud 11 p m returning every hour from 7 a m to 8 pm and 10 and m Georgetown Lve Lexington every hour from 6 a m 7 p m and 9 and 11 p m returning every hour 6 ain to 3 p m 10 p m R T GUNN Gen Man ParisLeave 11 J I LUSITANIAN Spains SHpdew and the Africa Livingstone Found On the dry heaths of Spain and POI tugal the eye is surprised to see an undoubted specimen of the marsh plant called sundew It has long linear red leaves covered with hairs and dew drops Entrapped insects abound But the heath is dry The plants around have hard leaves like heather or berries They are in botanists slang xerophiles and no marsh plants are visible Has a drosera or drosophyl lum for so the Lusitanian herb is named forgotten its nature If so whence the supply of water for the glands It is not 0 prosophyllum has not forgotten the family traditions but has a long taproot which extends six eight or ten feet through the soil usually dry ground to the stream of water which trickles under neath Like all its it is liv ing in contact with water though its associates on the surface have their roots in arid grounds In Britain there are two perhaps three species of the sundew drosera distinguished bj the leaves which in the one are round on a hairy stalk and in the other long and narrow on a smooth peduncle Both are in the marshy lands of and the round leaved variety is common in England where the ground is favora ble As a worldwide plant the sundew is one of those plants which at times are met suddenly by wanderers In the wil derness and recall to their minds the distant and sweet scenes of home A species of the if we do not err the very species may be seen in the botanic gardens of Edinburgh gave a similar delight to David Living stone in one of his first great journeys In Tune 185 he was making his way from the west to the east coast of Africa and had reached the marshy plateau of the central watershed near Lake Dilolo While passing across these interminable looking plains an other beautiful plant attracted my at tention so strongly that I dismounted to examine it To my great delight I found it to be an old home acquaint anee a species of drosera closely our own Drosera an glica The flower stalk never attains a height of more than two or three inches and the leaves are covered with reddish hairs each of which has a drop of clammy fluid at its tip making the whole as if spangled over with small diamonds I noticed it first in the morning and imagined the appear ance was caused by the sun shining on drops of dew but as it continued to maintain its brilliancy during the heat of the day I proceeded to investigate the of its beauty and found that the points of the hairs exuded pure liquid in apparently capsules of clear glutinous matter They were thus like dewdrops preserved from evaporation The clammy fluid is intended to entrap Insects which dying on the leaf prob ably afford nutriment to the plant Livingstone with the intuition of a powerful mind strikes on the peculiar habit of the drosera which explains its color its glandular excrescences its worldwide extension and the special interest which it has excited among students such as Mr Darwin It feeds on insects It lives not as other plants on the pure minerals latent in earth air and water but the same diluted through a body which once had life It is a plant with something of the habit of an animal The conspicuous ruddy color attracts the insect which is caught in the sticky liquor and im nutriment gives the plant an easy It has no rivals it hay not the same fierce struggle to maintain its ground that the tough rooted plants of the hillside endure before which the tender succumb Perched on the moss it draws in by its roots a supply of water and is sought by a food which is useless to other plants hence it has little need for variation and granting marshy land there it finds a home Scotsman Not of Much Account The lord chief justice of England used to sing in the choir of church A woman once asked the verger to point out Sir Richard Webster as he then was The verger replied Well maam thats the vicar and thems the curates glad Im the verger but as for the choir as long as they does their dooty we dont inquire into their hante cedents StupId I wish I was half as beautiful as Miss Brown remarked the fair Edith to Mr Green Well you are you know replied Green thoughtlessly Then he wondered why she suddenly rose and left him Delicate Operation Yaws suddenly declared ebony Braneless Im going to work Ive made up my mind You have exclaimed Pep pery My What a delicate opera tion Catholic Standard and Times i DriaginK It Home Ht r Father What are youand Sbortleigh going to live on in case you nary His Daughter Well if in ttst know papa look Iri the mirror 1 ran congeners common Scotland droseraand resembling sundew on paled on the sharp hairs The peculiar ceases ss aparish Miss you HERB l Float surface appear cause sustenance yours g has been by some people as the land of pyramids and but it has from time immemorial had a reputation for Ancient Egyptians swore by tiff onion and regarded the plant as sa r3d The inscription on the mi I of Cheops tells us that the work inon had onions given t them and from the Bible we learn that the He brews when slaves under Pharaoh enjoyed these bulbs and that when far away they remembered the leeks and thi onions and the garlic The Egyp tion onion is a handsome gild useful vegetable and by selecting the best strains of seed the quality tends year by year to improve The Egyptian knows two varieties the Baali and the Miskaoui but supplies of the kind are seldom sent abroad as absorb so moisture from the frequently irrigated ground in which they are grown that they do not stand a soft voyage well The Baali onion is the more popular Egyptian onion and is grown in yellow soil which is sparingly watered while the bulbs are maturing in order that the may stand a lengthy sea voyage with little risk of sprouting Cheap Living In 7 orTvny It is a good scheme said a rich to spend the summer iiu Norway The Norwegian climate is superb the scenery is grand and the living is cheap a dollar a day at the hotels and carriages at a half dollar a day One Hue thing about Norway is that in the summer the night only lasts a couple of hours and if you go as far as the North cape there is no night at all but the sun circles round and round the horizon and never sinks below The Norwegian rivers abound in fish and any one is free to angle for trout in them The salmon rivers though are strictly preserved Some of the salmon rivers are very fine and rent for as much as 2000 a year I know a man who has a river only two miles long that he pays 1SOO for He often nets fish sixty or seventy pounds The day I called on him his wife came in with a forty pounder a twentytwo pounder and a fiftyone pounder that she had caught herself within three hours r 4 7 A Forest of Giants It is almost impossible for one who has seen only the or Rocky mountain imagine the woods of the Pacific coast Pictures of the big trees are as c niaioa rs stamps but the most thing about the big trees is that they ar3 scarcely bigger than the rest of the for of our timber An average acre in the mountain forest yields one to two thousand board feet of lumber in the southern forest three to four thou sand In the northern forest four to six thousand ATI average acre on the Pacific coast yields fifteen to twenty thousand Telescope the southern and Rocky mountain forests toss the north ern on top of them and the cen tral into the chinks and acre for acre the Pacific forest will outweigh them Magazine Stains on Books Ink stains may be removed from a book by applying with a camels hair pencil a small quantity of oxalic acid diluted with water and then using paper Two applications will re all traces of the ink To remove grease spots lay powdered pipeclay each side of the spot and with an iron as hot as the paper will bear without scorching Sometimes grease spots may be removed from paper or cloth by laying a piece of blotting pa per on them and then pressing the paper with a hot iron The heat melts the grease and the blotting pa per absorbs it Tke Little Toe to Go A comparative anatomist says that the little toe has got to go that it is a useless appendage already showing signs of degeneration or withering away It is proved that the horse in the course of several centuries as dropped four toes and now travels jn ont and some think that pedal extremities are bound to follow a sim ilar line of evolution In the horse it is the middle digit which has survived as the fittest In man it will be first or toe In No An old citizen who hen pecked all his life was about to die His wife felt it her duty ta him such consolation as she and said John you are about but I will follow you I suppose so Mandai said the old man weakly but so fur as I am con cerned you dont need to be in any blamed hurry about it Past Present and Future Mrs D Vorcee If I could only for get the past But alas it is ever be fore me Mrs have a sad future with your past always Take my advice and leave the past behind present and live in the the future and tfpt in the past Life x marry for almost invariably earn it V EnptltEgypt oulv oaf ns pTa eastern atenth stuff allAmerican blotting move press blotting th hub en oust OlduuYoull present the f j Tho awn I On1one regr led tnuies latter thy much odious i man v forests to wonderful Rocky maws great togo future for money e Mow Kmery Is Quarried Emery from the island of Naxos in eastern Mediterranean whence it has been exported for tne last two centuries or more The beds are in the northeast of the island the deposit descending into some of the neighboring islands the emery being found in lenticular masses resting on layers of schist in limestone almost identical witti Parfait marble the fin est marble known which Mmes from the island of Paros close by There are about 300 men engaged in the trade all of whom have to be married they are admitted to the fra ternity The material is much too hard to be dug out or even blasted Great fires are lighted round the blocks till the natural cracks expand with the heat and levers are then inserted to them apart system is continued until the blocks are reduced in size to masses of a cubic foot or less and they are then shipped as if they were coals There are said to be 20000000 tons yet avail able at Naxos it is one of the hard est substances yet known coming next tD the diamond and among its forms known to the jewelers are the ruby and the sapphire Lighting a Pipe A smoker who started to light his pipe on the street turned to his com panion and said A man told me the other day how to light an 5rdinary match in a high wind Let show you There was a stiff breeze blowing The demonstrator took from his pocket an envelope struck a parlor match rail and shielded it inside of the facing the wind as he did so I The match burned with hardly a flick er and the man who held it puffed on his pipe with great satisfaction Thats a trick worth knowing he remarked Heres another Some times you get a spark on top of your pipe which the most vigorous fails to spread over the surface of the tobacco In that take a piece of paper of almost any kind and hold it down in the spark This will spread the fire and give you sort of light a pipe smoker waafs Providence Journal ii ijSaS8SSBiA Raking Grass After Mowing Some persons advise raking after each mowing I do not because the clippings drop down into the grass antI form a mulch which I consider of great benefit They also help to fer tilize the soil lawn that is not mowed often enough will not look well after you have been over it with the mower because there was growth enough to partially hide the sward on it falls This will wither and turn brown in a day or two and detract from the beauty of the lawn But if you keep your lawn well mowed that means going over it at least three times a week in ordinary sea sonsrthe amount clipped off at each mowing will be so slight that there will not be enough of it to show Let the blades be set high enough to leave at least two inches of the foil age Outing Magazine The Coyote One of the most interesting wild ani mals is the prairie wolf known in Mexico as the coyote and in the old world as the jackal It is thirtysix to forty inches long with a tail sixteen to eighteen inches in length The color is usually a dull yellowish gray on the back and sides with black Cloudings The riiixlerpart and inside of the limbs are of a dirty white tint The voice is a sort of snapping bark and for this reason the animal Is known as the barking wolf It is found on the western plains extend lug from Mexico to latitude 55 degrees north It hunts in packs and Is very fleet A Good Color Negroes use the same phrases they hear whites use often with amusing application This conversation over heard in the streets Of a southern city la related in Lippiucotts Magazine Howdy Mis Mandy How is you Called one dusky aunty to another Oh I jes tollable Mis Johnson How you feelin was the response Why Fs afeelin peart I is con tided Mrs I suttenly does feel fine yo sho ia look In well agreed friend Yo col Drs so good Husbands In Turkey are easy to obtain in and a husband and wife may three times If they wish to marry a fourth time the woman must go through the formality of marrying another man and then of being dl vorced This custom has given rise to a curious proxy husbands Such men are generally blind and have no hesitancy in their brides for a money He Has Pa what does savoir faire mean Well I dont know that I can ex plain it exactly but the man who can look tickled and interested when some starts to tell a sty that he has heard about twenty times before has all right Chicago It is a wise fattier who hinges of the front gate I I I e me I o- nt puffing t r The which greatly and measuring rti Johnson Divorces Turkey remarry professionthat consideration I the 0 u comes before This crystalline envelop e case the knife um lie relinquishing body Record S gteases Cr- + Slowly The opinion that hurry in eating ia a prolific cause of dyspepsia Is founded on common observation The ill results of bolting food have been attributed to the lack of thorough mastication the incomplete action of the saliva upoa the food Twothirds of the food Which We eat is starch and starch cannot l e utilized in the system as food until it has been converted into sugar and tki change is principally effected by t6saliva But there is a third reason rapidity of eating interferes with di gestion The presence of the secretion in the stomach acts as a stimulus to the secretion of the gastric juice Irrespective of the mechanical function of the teeth food which goes into the stomach incompletely mingled with saliva passes slowly and imper fectly through the process of stomach digestion Therefore as a sanitary maxim of no mean value teach the children to eat slowly sand in giving this instruction by example the teacnisr as well as the pupil may benefit I Discrimination Ia Banks The fact appears not to be generally Ijnown that financial institutions exr tend courtesy toward each other by ac cording messengers bearing drafts or checks precedence in line at paying tellers windows of the time of day or the rushj f An unusually long waiting was in evidence at the withdrawal windo nr of a bank near Union square the other afternoon when a few minutes before closing hour 3 oclock a youth elbowed right of way for himself at the same moment taking from his coat pocket the conventional foot long doctt ment receptacle chained to his belt A couple of impatient men on the line registered vigorous protests but that was all the good it did them New York Press T In Trade Miss is Lord hedd He made his in Miss Slusher What line Miss Gusher Matrimonial He trad ed his title for au heiress pfl All serious souls are better in immortality than give grounds for Emerson iK n English As She Is Wrote Some ludicrous mistakes made by some of the FrenchCanadian people in our New England cotton mill in their attempt to master English One summer a grain dealer in Som ersworth N H received a written order from one of his French custom ers which read as follows Please sclI bag hole corn jj ij i mx field raftS 5 pounds acid The clerk who has had many years experience with these people said at once Send him a bag of whole corn a bag of mixed feed and five pounds of grass seed or as the French people put it hayseed And he right At another time an order wag re ceived for a bag of broket corn not Herald V CORN WANTED We are in the market for Corn and will highest market price for same STUART OBRIEN Directly opp L N Freight Depot Fair Enough If you will try a case of the famous Lion the best on earth and not pleased with it we will fund your money All doctors recom this beer for family use and for convalescents T BRANNON 3jy2mo Agent Lion Brewing Co jfr WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF Sharpening Saws lawn lowers Fitting Keys 3 Repairing Ammunition of- m 3 always o hand 111 WALtER DAVIS d r a lT1uYl I l1e8S 7 r i GusherThat tr d f rrrF belieVer we I I toW oJ JtiIiCIt 4 I corn at still another an order for brokeBoston pay eer ire gladlyre J g it t i r 1 ts a t na i s i t Wa1he I g fi afi4 1 c r Eating ando why notes business list Noodle money can are it was rand bag A amend t i I 4 M f J = + +++++ + + + + + + + + + + ++++ + + + 1 THE BOURBON NEWS a TtBrt d d 7j PA IRKENTUCKY lfV 1 0 nJji d t T WANTED Wheat Wheat We are prepared to un load 2000 bushels per hour save We will buy wheat at all Lions in Bourbon and ad joining counties v Will store your wheat in our steel tanks and no Paris Milling Co Farm For Sale Privately We offer at private sale a farm con taining 278 acres 3 miles from Paris on Ruddles Mills turnpike This farm is in a high state of cultivation Has on it three good tenant houses one large tobacco barn stock scales etc plenty of never failing water 212 acres in grass balance in Those desiring a good investment would do well to write for terms etc Possession given March 1 1907 Ad dress CLARENCE ASHURST KyOr20tf Paris Kentucky RENTMy farm of 356 acres near Hutchison J M RUSSELL tf Home phone 44 r 1 IfI 1 ee I 1 t 1I Ista 1 1 I I L J- I I I i J vOR I i delays i F necessary i w cultivation it Blue Grass Seed Wanted mxjj We are in the market for bluegrass seed the stripper also for August delivery R B HUTCHCRAFT tf T Paris Ky Dying of Famine is in its torments like dying of con sumption The of tion from the beginning to the very end is a long torture to victim and friends When I had consump tion in its first stage writes Wm Myers of Cearfoss Md after try ing different medicines a good doctor in vain I at last took Dr New Discovery which quickly and perfectly cured me Prompt re lief sure cure for coughs sore throat bronchitis etc Posi tively pneumonia Guaran teen at Oberdorfers store Price 50c and 1 a bottle Trial free Gossips might be appropriately term ed misfortune tellers Highest Market Price Paid We will pay you the highest market price for your wheat You will save time by selling to us as we unload 2000 bushels per hour PARIS MILLING CO DEMOCRATIC TICKET For Congress W P KIMBALL of Fayette CHARLES A HcMILLAN ATTORNEYATLAW Office No 3 Broadway East Tenn Phone J T McMillans Old from and bottle t I I 743- r Stand- i I d consum f New Real Etate Agent v We desire to notify the people of Paris and Bourbon County that we have opened a Real Estate office in the room occupied by the late J W Lancaster V We are ready to sell or rent your farms property We do a general Real Sstate business in four of the surrounding counties at Lexing ton Versailles and Paris All parties listing with us will get the boil efit of all offices at same price that a local v office V0V 7 i Qeo B Mosley Mr Lee Beall is in charge of our Paris office and will be pleased to have you call on him i if J I J f J Nicholasville i i Ij wouldcharge I I J I and Cher our I i r = sense heals WORTH 150 ir y buys choice of 322 pairs of shoes and oxfords made in the finest ideal kid calf and vici kid in Gibson and Christy toes light f women 3 n metal arid WORTH 250 and 3 r heavy solesr 1 buys choice of 2 1 pairs of womens oxfords and shoes in fine patent colt tan russet calf and vici kid in now uptodate styles and widths WORTH 2 and 250 all sizes t elfat j j j Our Washington Letter BY EARL W MAYO WASHINGTON August the introduction the army of the fingerprint identification system Uncle Sam will have a unique method Of his which the War Department asserts is more reliable and practical than any now in existence The French system of Bertillion based upon a series of all possible measure ments has been tried in the past but with not great success and the War Department is now substituting the method made popular by Mark Twain in Puddin Head Wilson Briefly the system consists of having every man place a print of his right thumb and finger on specially prepar ed slide on the back of which is pasted a slip giving his name next of kin height similar information the slides to be filed at the War Department While the new is to be put into general effect it seems probable however that it will be tried only on the new rookies as the recruits are called for a protest loud and long has risen from the men already enlisted against being forced to have anything to do with a little dinky piece of glass as though each was a probable deserter That thefsys tern will be of great value there is no doubt Nominally it is being in order to do away with the unknown soldiers grave in the future In the case of a corpse which cannot be othercwise identified it will be only necessary to take a print of the fingers before burial to be compared with the original at the War Depart ment As a matter of fact however the new system will protect the govern ment from frauds in pension cases since no enlisted under an assumed name can afterward claim in his own name a pension and to escape de tection Deserters too will find it harder than ever to escape the long arm of Uncle Sam since in the future finger print plates will supplied recruiting officers Washington lending a carefully tuned ear to the Chautauqua speeches of LaFollette as becomes the city of future Presidents is wondering whether the Wisconsin statesmans bark is worse than his bite His enemies it is true are more or less un but his friends are getting some quiet amusement this week out of the recently published report of Edward B Smith of the Wicsonsin Free Commission onthe part vhich has been played in carrying on public utilities in the native state of the nations trustbuster Although it might properly be supposed that the corporate powers eat out of the hand of the au JrIeI E I fl h k JII 1 I1a4 9With into I fightingmen I I I I I gelatine overed I process I one be f J 0 t Senator easy Library I a identifying enlisted t introduced hope tall d o LAST CALL 1454 CALL 196 LAST sizes LAST CALL 1i2I BAR COHENI Ii o ii zi 1 Ii l Y QrJ1Ifit n J tie eye vuTrn r y P = in the XaFollete show that fri every city of any considerable size the Wisconsin citizens are perfectly satisfied with the service of the private corporations in the of supply of light Not one of the dozen enterprising cities of over 10QDO population in the state has a municipal electric light plant and in all the hundreds of lesser towns only fortyfive such plants exjst in this day of municipal ownership agitation The trustbusting element among the Wisconsin representatives here retort that Visconsin is not the only Mr Smiths figures show that in twenty three other states of the Union not one city over 10000 has an electric plant of its own today Its the railroads and not light companies need taming in Wisconsin they say Some of the local unregenerate anti imperialists have been unkind enough to of late Uncle Sam might derive some benefit from the Philippine Islands by using them for the peaceable purpose of storing away his dead letter mail More than JL1 000 000 pieces of undelivered mail were handled by the dead letter office in the fiscal year just ended and the problem of sorting and caring for such a tre mendous mass is a very serious one Over 30000 pieces of this mail are handled every greater amount than that of any fairsized city No one will disagree with the belief of Ai sistant Postmaster General McGraw that the number of dead letters is and ought to be reduced but the question is how to accomplish such a reduction Aside from the incor venience resulting to writers and ad dresses from nondelivery the pecuniary loss is considerable since during the present month alone 2000 for which no owners could be found was turned into the loss which unfor tunately falls upon those most in need of funds At present McGraw mopping his perspiring brow the while been aole to suggest that let ters writers be more 0 Secretary Taft it is rumored here has started a D D F F Club with himself as all the officers and the com mittee on membership besides To those who have received from him a letter beginning D D F F in place of the conventional My Dear Mr Jones the matter is no secret those who havent received such a communi cation evidently have not written urging him to follow the advice of the President to put aside the proffered seat in the Supreme Court and instea shy his castor into the Presidential Arena in 1908 Likewise those who have made bold to urge this course of action on the Secretary orally under stand when they have received from him the reply accompanied by a Brob dingnagian churkle I see Ill have to put you on my D D F F list Mr T ft will not at first inform oriel as to the meaning of these letters but after one has pondered foij a while he will merely explain that ites statistic t atleast as the that 0 suggest that daya excessive I Treasurya M hint 0 1 cabalist bailiwick mater however one population has only careful We are determined to make this final effort a grand Those who have already purchased tliafe pleased great S bargains For those that dik participate in this grand feast of bargains wa wish to say that we have another greatx f v t w4Vy Every Oxford Every Shoe Every 011ppfer I TW v T be sold regardless of price Bargainseekers now is your opportunity to buy seasonable footwear at almost nethingpricesp 11 Iour SUccess with the t f imin 1 I I i were more not made final n- A this house usf LAST CALL 7 74c r LAST CALL h 146waie t LAST CALL L20i l at ME LAST AND FINAL CALL W ri4 w t Iw r tIT t iI rr8 mf r tz zoo oo 41z 11ill ttI buys choice of 249 pairs of womens oxfords and slippers made in patent colt vici kid and tan russet calf 2 and 3 straps Cuban and common buys choice of 263 pairs of mens shoes and oxfords in box calf patent colt vici kid in Blucher and straight lace singleand double soles WORTH 250 buys choice of 361 pairs of mens shoes and t made in genuine ideal kid patent and vici Goodyear welt soles all styles V f I WORTH 3 kid tI oxfords colt velour calf and r in box calf tan Russia calf and vici kid in all and sizes all weight syles WORTH 175 and 2 i buys choice of 283 pairs of men s ford 1i s I r t shoeanlo styles 1 Freemans Old Stand 336 main Street Freeman R1M IK K 8 nr O I t = s they stand for D mri Fool Friend V Thats as far asShe present but it ought to bring relief to others in whose Heads bee is buzzing I Q The man wfio resignedly endeavored to discover the usefulness of bugs will only in a still situation if he reads the dicta of the government medicos The unpopular mosquito has been proven to the conveyor of yellow and the report to the Bureau of In sular AlTairs from the Phiilppines that cholera in those islands is tovbe laid to the door of the sleepdisturbing but hitherto otherwise unoffensive house fly Besides carrying on a more or less active internal war the government is now forced to take up arms against the dangerous fly and orders have accord ingly been issued which when carried out will make his life about as unhappy as that of the unterconstructed Fili pino Some skeptics however have made themselves unpopular by allow ing that the flies and the Filipinos will be at about the time that is when they are dead v J ki P yf i Jtt h i Graham D Gibbs an employe of Sante Fe railroad committed suicide at Wellington Kani recently bowing up dsrnarnite in front of the Wellington Nations bank dency over the unhappy outcome of a love affair is given as the cause in a Gibbs suspended the deadly parcel his neck by means of a cord and j then a end of the There was a wild for the few persons near divining what was about to happen The fuse burned almost up to the package that lay against his breast and then disappeared under a corner of the newspaper covering As a whisp of smoke from the burning paper curled up Gibbs suddenly seemed to realize that he stopi upon the threshold of eternity and he strove desperately to bundle and to cast it from him Even while he struggled to tear it from his neck an awful roar shook the town breaking windows for blocks aroundA gaping hole in the street marked the place where he had stood Not a fragment of him big enough to be picked up could be found Doomed to Hades With the gallows for his execution in sound 6t his cell J G Rawlins former Methodist two sonsusj under death sentence for the murder the two Carter children because xf a fued with their brother broke into anathemas at the jail at Valdosta Ga when told that his John R Cooper wouldpfSblably succeed in Kay ing th execution postponed v I hope Cooper will be stricken dead in his tracks shrieked Rawlings if I t Dear beplaced moremixing fever I comes i subdued same I I the ith 1 farewellnote all d matchto I scurry I l remove the beingerected preacher his of I f will goat the Presidential purpose ahd row himself Despon from the fins cover who with attorney e = + gM Q5c war4 N LAST GAEL 4gc U f L 4 t r LAST 9 h J CALL fs Disease H Crime Not a popular magazine published an editorial in that all disease should be regarded as criminal Certain it is that of the sickness and suffering of mankind is due to the certain of Natures laws But to say that all sickness should be as criminal must appeal to every reasonable individual as radically It would be harsh unsympathetic cruel criminal to the weak overworked housewife who sinks under the heavy load of household cares and burdens and suffers from weak nesses various displacements of pelvic organs and peculiar to ner sex Frequent bearing of children with Its ex acting demands upon the system coupled with the care worry and boor of rearing large family is cause of derangements and ave aggravated by the maul household cares and the and neverendingwork which the mother is called upon to perform Dr Pierce the maker of that worldfamed rem ed5 for womans peculiar weaknesses and Ills Dr Pierces Favorite says that one of the greatest obstacles to the cure of this class of Is the fact that the poor overworked housewife can not the needed rest from her many household cares and labor to enable her to secure from the In his extensive practice in these cases to meet with those Ju which his treatment fails by reason of the patients inability to abstain from hard work long to be cured With those suffering from prolapsus anteversion and of the uterus or other displacement of the womanly organs front being very much or for lon periods o their feet AH heavy lifting or straining of ny kind should also be much outdoor air as possible with moderate light exercise is also very important Let the Dr Pierces Medical Adviser is sent free on of stamps to pay expense of mailing Pierce N Y 21 onecent for percovered or 31 stamps for clothbound If sick consult the Doctor free of by letter All such communications are held sacredly confidential vDr Pierces Pleasant Pellets invigorate and regulate stomach and bowels he tries to prevent the hanging Milton and Jesse agree with their father in not wanting a commutation Elder Rawlings was asked if he really wanted to be hanged- I surely do he said I surely do I have ncthing to live for I am all in and life is trot worth living Then I have three or four thousand dollars life insur n2e to leave the old woman That will do her more good than my life would do her The carpenters are busy working on the gallows and every blow of the hammers reverbarated through the jail and up to the cell where Rawlings and his boys are confined That sounds mighty good said the old man If they dont spoil every thing with another respite Rawlings then remarked that he was doomed to eternal punishment in the world anyhow and he might as well go at f Wlieat AVlieat We want tq buy ygur wheat at high est market price You can tirre if you sell to us in unloading We un load 2000 bushels per hour If you do not care to sell we will store your wheat in steel tanks and no will be neqessa yi We buy at all in Bourbonx and adjoining counties PARIS MILLING CO I mn the ItIs l tome 11 J save now our often weaknesses taking favorIte next once l insurance stations J buysnchpjce o 20 canvasj r oxjords and slippers with large eyelets and coveredand leather heel tig ands plain toes f WORTH 150 and 200 r J E wl places I f 3 C ins of soon i l vTlii buys choice of 272J pairs of means children shoes oxfords andand SIzes ltti q J J J ands small leathers t WORTH75c to10o ut2 buys choice of 1S9 pairs bf rbdys ancl5 tlfttle eir oxfords in patent colt and gun metal WORTH si5o shoes and tin Illt style3 andsizes I itr g KY ooCi it tI 1 ti 1I4 z i z I I 4f 4 1I 00 f c PARIS 4 = iIi